Showing posts with label Champs-Élysées. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Champs-Élysées. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Weekly Header Challenge - Night Lights

It's time for the Weekly Header Challenge!

"Headbanger" Participants
Imac 


I'm joining in the group above for this weekly challenge.
Click on the other participants' blogs to see
what they've come up with!


Theme ~ Night Lights

chosen by Craver

I've used several of my nighttime images--moon and stars--in past Headbanger posts, and so my thoughts turned toward the man-made varieties of lights that we see once the sun sets.  I don't have many of those, but I do have several from a very special place, thanks to my strong and thoughtful husband!  Fernando willingly toted my tripod around Paris, both during the day and at night, so that I could get both selfies for us and beautiful nighttime shots.

Without further ado, mostly because I have a bad cold (developed in literally an hour yesterday) and my head is fuzzy to say the least, I give you my images for Night Lights.

My header image, minus the crop:

On Avenue Champs-Élysées, looking east toward the Arc de Triomphe.

The below is one of my very favorite images from our trip.

On Avenue Champs-Élysées, with the Arc to my back, looking west in the rain.


On Avenue Champs-Élysées, looking toward the Arc.


On Avenue Champs-Élysées -- Fouqet's, a restaurant featured in the movie Taken.

On Ile St. Louis, while we enjoyed our ice cream from Bertillon, just after a brief rain shower.


Pont des Arts, one of the four pedestrian bridges crossing the Seine.

Looking across the Seine River, with Notre Dame in the center.

On a side note, as I write this blog on Tuesday evening, I'm planning on heading out to the backyard patio to see if I can catch a good photo of Mars.  Today is the opposition of Mars!


Treasuring life's moments,
Christine

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Thursday, November 15, 2012

Evening Along Avenue Champs-Élysées | Paris Travel

Evening scene along avenue Champs-Élysées.

 
Our Silver Paris

Welcome to my Paris travel journal,
where I share our experiences of our special journey to Paris.
Please use these posts as a guide for your own travels
to this amazing and wonderful city!
Or simply read, and dream...



Fernando wanted to stroll down this famous street one last time, and to see l'Arc de Triomphe at night.  Since this was the last night we were going to be out (the next night = early bedtime to catch our wee-morning-hour flight home), we decided to forgo our nightly visit to the Berthillon ice cream stand. and do something special.  Plus, this was my birthday, and this street is pretty romantic at night.  (In my opinion, almost anywhere in Paris is romantic at night.)

We stepped in to stroll through this indoor mall, which was not that much different than an American one--except the architecture and design were much prettier.


We saw Ladurée again, and although the storefront was closed for renovation, there was a temporary shop set up along the sidewalk.  We decided we definitely needed to go in and buy something yummy.  I snapped one picture (didn't turn out), then casually and stealthily aimed my camera up at their chandelier.  A chandelier--in a temporary shop!


One of the sales associates called out, "Please, no photography!"  I was in trouble.  I put the lens cap on my camera.  Once we made our purchase and exited, I staged a shot of the bag which held our goodies.

Macaroons inside!

We continued walking, stopping to take night shots along the way.   Here's a typical evening scene along the avenue.  You may recognize Fouquet's, a famous restaurant on the avenue, from the movie Taken.  Liam Neeson and his French associate have a conversation in front of this spot, almost at the point where I'm standing to take the picture!


From that point on, our focus turned to l'Arc de Triomphe as we got closer and closer.



Yes, I'm standing in the middle of the road!  You can cross the avenue in two stages, since there is a middle "area" (see the traffic light in the center above?) where pedestrians can stop, then cross the rest of the way.  (Or stop and take pictures first!)

I decided to have a little fun with my camera, instead of taking the same picture of the arch from varying distances.  I had read briefly about this technique called zoom effect, and decided to try it.  Slow shutter speed, camera on a tripod.  I set the ISO to 100, and the aperture to f4 to achieve a shutter speed of 1.3 seconds.  My left hand held the lens, and my right hand pressed the shutter release.  As soon as the shutter release was pressed, my left hand twisted the lens from wide angle (17mm) to zoomed in.  The result is streaks of light leading toward the subject, which looks a little blurry but that's just due to the shadow of the image that the camera captured as I turned the lens.


I like the above image best, because I caught the streaks evenly.  I did crop it to where the streaks stopped, so they filled the entire frame.  The below image shows the streaks ending about halfway through the image, with car headlights traveling all the way through the image on the left.  Still, the overall effect is pretty cool with all the colors!


Here's a personal picture below.  See, Fernando got hungry.  There was a McDonald's.  'Nuff said.  This became a half-hour stop, and the slowest McDonald's we've ever encountered (not that I've eaten at one even once in the last ten years!).  At least it was on the Champs-Élysées!


Back to pursuing l'Arc.  We finally made it to the first stoplight in front of the arch--no more obstructions!  We had to wait our turn, since I wasn't the only one with this brilliant plan.


We crossed the avenue to the corner and took another shot.


Back at the center stoplight area, I wanted to turn around and take a picture looking back down the avenue.  And then, it started to rain.  Just a shower, but really--I got temporarily miffed at that half-hour McDonald's delay which was causing rain on my camera.  But, once I got the images downloaded, I realized that the water droplets on the lens added to the overall charm and romance of the avenue and the image.


I couldn't decide which of these two images I like better.  I think the below one, with its colorful and bright lines of car lights, edges out in front.


They're both special enough for me to share with you.  :)

  • Nearest Métro station:  We got off at Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt (lines 1 and 9) and walked west toward l'Arc de Triomphe.  Line 1 runs along the entire avenue, so you could get off at any point depending on how much you want to walk.
  • Cost:  Free.
  • What to look for:  In the evening, the streets are beautifully lit (of course!), and many stores and shops are open.  We enjoyed visiting car dealer showrooms (Renault and Mercedes Benz, see this post for some cool cars), people watching, a stop at Ladurée for macaroons, indoor mall shopping, and l'Arc de Triomphe, naturally!


Treasuring life's moments,
Christine

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Les Voitures de Paris -- Cars | Paris Travel

Looking east down avenue Champs-Élysées.


Our Silver Paris

Welcome to my Paris travel journal,
where I share our experiences of our special journey to Paris.
Please use these posts as a guide for your own travels
to this amazing and wonderful city!
Or simply read, and dream...



This will be a fun post, I hope.  After editing the hundreds of images I took throughout our trip, I realized that there were a lot of cars.  And there was this image, at the request of my husband:


It's hard to read the LED on this pump, but it works out to about $8.00 per gallon.  Yes, that's American dollars.  (I no longer complain about our gas prices.) 

So, I'm filling my "photography tank" with some gas, by posting the various cars we saw while on our trip.

I'll start off with a fun one, and the first deliberate car picture I took.  This image made me wonder how that car got there.  And, I also wondered how he was going to get out.  :)

Interesting parking job along avneue Winston Churchill.

We noticed two very significant things about vehicles during our week in Paris:

1.  Horns were rarely used.  Streets were packed at certain hours, but we almost never heard car horns.

2.  You know the loud, booming music emanating out of many American cars?  And/or the vibrations of the bass cranked to full levels?  Not in Paris.  At all.  (That we didn't hear, anyway.)
    
On part of our anniversary walk, we passed the Renault showroom on avenue Champs-Élysées.


Seriously cool car!
 

The next day, on our Seine River boat tour, I spotted the below scene, and snapped a picture.  The car is one of those that our sons call an "escape pod," so it was tiny to begin with.  But for some reason, it looks like a little toy car in this picture.  My funny bone was struck.  :)


Then, on my birthday, our evening jaunt took us back to avenue Champs-Élysées.  At one point, we passed the Mercedes-Benz showroom and wandered in.


Love the finish on the below car.

  

The Mercedes-Benz showroom also sells accessories, including this umbrella:

Mercedes-Benz label, Mercedes-Benz price.
 
We passed the Renault dealership again, and decided to go in this time.  Fun!


This car looks really, really happy.

They were also selling this one-seater, below.  That'd be a cool car to tool around Paris in!

  
Well, I thought that would be the end of my car pictures, but on our last day, the below car stopped me to have its picture taken.

Classy.


Treasuring life's moments,
Christine

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Friday, November 2, 2012

Avenue des Champs-Élysées | Paris Travel

Palais de la Découverte, avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt, Paris


Our Silver Paris

Welcome to my Paris travel journal,
where I share our experiences of our special journey to Paris.
Please use these posts as a guide for your own travels
to this amazing and wonderful city!
Or simply read, and dream...




On this particular day--still our actual anniversary day--our journey started with an outdoors visit to le musée du Louvre and would end up at l'Arc de Triomphe.  We were now on the famous avenue leading to the Arch!


We stopped at a Renault showroom to admire a really, really, really cool car in the window.  Yeah.


Here's my one image of Ladurée!  Can you believe they were closed for renovations?  They had a temporary shop open along the sidewalk; I'll blog about that in a future post.


Imagine living on avenue des Champs-Élysées!!  This is a very wealthy section of Paris, to be sure.


Like I said, a wealthy section of Paris.


I just couldn't resist sharing one image below of the avenue, from l'Arc de Triomphe looking back all the way to the Louvre.  I liked the views from l'Arc almost more than the views from le tour Eiffel!  And that's the subject of my next post.


Au revior, mes amis!!



Treasuring life's moments,
Christine

Visit my website
Stop by my family blog
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