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Take a look for some inspiration at my blog - I was in Paris in 2015 and shot probably 40 rolls of 120 through a Rolleiflex. http://dcphotoartist.com and do a search on Paris... I was mostly confined to the touristy areas because I was traveling with my dad who was 76 at the time of the trip. There's a TON of inspirational material out there if you just keep your eyes open as you wander. The places I went to include:
I rode the subway to get around all the places I went. It's convenient, fast, and inexpensive. Food? It takes some work to find a bad place to eat in France - I think the single best hot dog I ever had was in the railway station at Chalon-sur-Saone in the snack bar - a baguette sliced, with dijon mustard, the hot dog, and topped with gruyere cheese. While you're out wandering, lunch in the dining room at the Musee D'Orsay is phenomenal and a reasonable deal to boot. My dad and I got an apartment on the Ile St. Louis (the other island in the Seine behind Notre Dame) through VRBO, and most evenings walked out and just grabbed something at one of the restaurants on Rue Ile St. Louis, and never once had a bad meal.
- The town and the palace of Versailles
- The Louvre Museum
- The Opera Garnier
- The royal chapel at Sainte-Chapelle (on the same island in the Seine as Notre Dame cathedral)
- Notre Dame Cathedral
- The Rive Gauche
- The Pompidou Centre
- Centre Iris - a photography gallery and education center not far from the Pompidou
- The Musee D'Orsay (19th century to contemporary art - technically affiliated with the Louvre, whose collections stop at the mid-19th century)
- The Maison Europienne de la Photographie (when I was there it had the gigantic Salgado exhibit up, taking up most of the museum)
- The Eiffel Tower
Take a look for some inspiration at my blog - I was in Paris in 2015 and shot probably 40 rolls of 120 through a Rolleiflex. http://dcphotoartist.com and do a search on Paris... I was mostly confined to the touristy areas because I was traveling with my dad who was 76 at the time of the trip. There's a TON of inspirational material out there if you just keep your eyes open as you wander. The places I went to include:
I rode the subway to get around all the places I went. It's convenient, fast, and inexpensive. Food? It takes some work to find a bad place to eat in France - I think the single best hot dog I ever had was in the railway station at Chalon-sur-Saone in the snack bar - a baguette sliced, with dijon mustard, the hot dog, and topped with gruyere cheese. While you're out wandering, lunch in the dining room at the Musee D'Orsay is phenomenal and a reasonable deal to boot. My dad and I got an apartment on the Ile St. Louis (the other island in the Seine behind Notre Dame) through VRBO, and most evenings walked out and just grabbed something at one of the restaurants on Rue Ile St. Louis, and never once had a bad meal.
- The town and the palace of Versailles
- The Louvre Museum
- The Opera Garnier
- The royal chapel at Sainte-Chapelle (on the same island in the Seine as Notre Dame cathedral)
- Notre Dame Cathedral
- The Rive Gauche
- The Pompidou Centre
- Centre Iris - a photography gallery and education center not far from the Pompidou
- The Musee D'Orsay (19th century to contemporary art - technically affiliated with the Louvre, whose collections stop at the mid-19th century)
- The Maison Europienne de la Photographie (when I was there it had the gigantic Salgado exhibit up, taking up most of the museum)
- The Eiffel Tower
If you are a bit of a mythomaniac you can't miss Père-Lachaise cementery. Callas, Chopin, Morrison, Balzac, Moliere, Proust, Wilde...
Yes, it's Scott. Glad you liked the photos. Yes, all were shot with a Rollei 2.8E. I hand-carried all my film with me on the plane. I didn't know how much I'd be shooting, so I brought overkill with me - I had something like 100 rolls of film in my bag, between the Tri-X, Ektar, Portra 400 and Portra 800, and some FP4+. The only thing I didn't need to bring was the FP4+. It was my first time in Paris as a photographer, and as an adult. I was there for about 2 days when I was a teenager, so I was essentially seeing it for the first time.Scott (?): Thanks for sharing this. Went to your blog... TRAVEL, France (Color and B&W). Are these all with a Rolleiflex? VERY good work, btw. Lovin' that! Thanks for sharing something of your favorite places. Had you been there before? This will be my first time. 40 rolls of film? Did you ship it over or back? or carry it with you?
FWIW, sure wish I'd been able to travel with my Dad at the same age! Ah... what a thought. And I can bet yours knew he was a lucky guy to be traveling with you! What a memory. Thank you for this.
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When I was there it was clearly marked out with signs - not Vegas-grade blinking neon "Enter Here" signs, but easy enough to find. To enter, you have to pass through the Palace de Justice so you get a serious security screening.The royal chapel at Sainte-Chapelle (on the same island in the Seine as Notre Dame cathedral) is hidden. You have to look around and ask, but well worth it if you go to the second floor.
I was there just over a week ago. We spent a considerable amount of time looking for Jim Morrison before we realized there was more than one notable cemetery in Paris. We couldn't find Man Ray or Brassai (it was now almost closing time and we didn't try very hard) but we did stumble over Saint-Saens. I'm a mathematician by education and there are a number of notables in the field buried there. Poincare comes to mind.All of the big "4" cemeteries have their fair share of notable internments. For photographic history, Montparnasse cemetery is the final resting place of Man Ray and Brassai, and somewhat adjacent to photography, Susan Sontag. But others like de Beauvoir and Sartre, Baudelaire, Dreyfus, de Maupassant are a few well-known people buried there too.
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