TheGreatGasMaskMan
Member
I haven't included it but you made a comment that suggested a picture of a particularly attractive design on a children's playground apparatus indicated you are a pervert. Clearly by itself as it stands it does not, nor of course and rightly so, do you believe it does either .
In another playground and/or with another set of parents there may not have been a problem but I just don't know as I wasn't there.
You have several choices: 1. Do not go anywhere near that playground again and feel wronged with nothing changing
2. Decide that photographing playground equipment is what you want to do and try and determine if there is anything you can do to avoid an altercation again such as the way you approach the area, how you act when in the area, what will be your strategy if there are children near by or on the equipment you wish to photograph. Did you engage the suspicious adults in conversation for instance, declare who you were, what you were trying to do etc
3. Simply ignore the adults protestations and summon the police yourself, asserting that you were under threat of assault and your right to photograph anything and anybody including kids in a public place
You then have to decide the likely outcomes of each course of action work and decide which produces the best result.
It is just possible that even option 2 will not change anything so the wrong you feel was done to you will remain a feeling forever. If this were to be the case then you have my sympathies that feeling of yours changes nothing. So I believe it to be in your self interest to solve the problem in the sense that no one else has a problem that needs solving so only you have a vested interest in improving future outcomes. No-one else except you has any incentive to do anything to change the future
Best of luck
pentaxuser
Keep in mind- the yellow and red playground, I was handholding a yashica mat 124g with 1999 expired gold 100 (so shooting at iso 25), the playground wasn't particularly busy (and there were no kids in that section anyway), so I could get in and get out without hassle.
the incident that inspired this thread, I was using a Mamiya c220, with 1980 expired vericolor II (iso 6, so I had to use a tripod and take longer). with the frame I shared, I actually waited for kids to leave the frame before I took it. the second frame I wanted, I was setting up and got confronted.
here's another one that was shot on an active playground about a year ago- using a 35mm nikon nikkormat. no accusations or confrontations whatsoever.