MartinCrabtree
Member
Oh it's not a bad thing, just life from another angle.
This is not how I normally share my dad's photographs because I took a picture of it, framed and behind glass. But I didn't want to unframe it and searching for the negative would take a lot of time. But it's one of my favorites because it shows Sutro Baths (at the bottom) before it burned down in 1966. Built in 1894, it lasted 72 years although it burned while being demolished anyway. And the Cliff House, of course, is the white building just to the right of the Baths. Dad was a pilot and took many aerial photographs of San Francisco over decades.
That's a great view! What's the complex of white buildings just left of center, up on the hill?
This might not be of interest to many outside of San Francisco but what's neat about it is the way the panorama was created, sometime in the '60s. My dad took eight or so pictures and the art director at the Examiner (Dan De La Torre) spliced them together with an X-acto knife at the precision points. It ran in the paper and somewhere I have the clipping with more details (can't find it, though). But for the life of me, I don't know where he took the photos from. I think it's from a building rooftop around Bryant Street, between 2nd and 3rd streets, looking northwest at Interstate 80. Sutro Tower at Twin Peaks is a clue in the distance on the left. If any San Franciscan has a better guess, I'd love to hear it. (This photo is behind glass, too).![]()
That's some serious analog tech! Priceless bit of history. Very much like NASA back in the day! Wouldn't be amazing to have a high resolution scan made of that original (contact print of large format negatives) made! Probably be able to see people having coffee on their verandas![]()
Though the subject matter is very different, the technical physical care required put me in mind of what I have read about Jerry Uelsmann's work.
That's some serious analog tech! Priceless bit of history. Very much like NASA back in the day! Wouldn't be amazing to have a high resolution scan made of that original (contact print of large format negatives) made! Probably be able to see people having coffee on their verandas![]()
What I find notable in the picture is how few cars are on the freeway!
Early morning on a Sunday?
That tripod was very carefully levelled and the camera aligned vertically to keep the verticals good enough for the match. The sheets must have been exposed in fairly quick succession too, as the shadows would be moving. Add to that the swivelling of the camera, probably by a precise amount, and the choreography must have been challenging.
Early morning on a Sunday?
That tripod was very carefully levelled and the camera aligned vertically to keep the verticals good enough for the match. The sheets must have been exposed in fairly quick succession too, as the shadows would be moving. Add to that the swivelling of the camera, probably by a precise amount, and the choreography must have been challenging.
This might not be of interest to many outside of San Francisco but what's neat about it is the way the panorama was created, sometime in the '60s. My dad took eight or so pictures and the art director at the Examiner (Dan De La Torre) spliced them together with an X-acto knife at the precision points. It ran in the paper and somewhere I have the clipping with more details (can't find it, though). But for the life of me, I don't know where he took the photos from. I think it's from a building rooftop around Bryant Street, between 2nd and 3rd streets, looking northwest at Interstate 80. Sutro Tower at Twin Peaks is a clue in the distance on the left. If any San Franciscan has a better guess, I'd love to hear it. (This photo is behind glass, too).![]()
It looks like it was taken from the top of an industrial building in the Rincon Hill area. In the lower part of the image you can see the old Transbay Terminal – the one story white building that's running horizontally left to right. Fremont street on the right cuts through it and First street on the left. At first I thought it was taken from the top of 301 Brannan which was a 6 story brick building originally constructed in 1906 for a plumbing supply house.
On possibility is the old Harley Terminal Building at 274 Brannan Street.
In the 19th Century Rincon Hill was the wealthiest residential section of SF with many mansions and famous residents. Photographer Carleton Watkins photographed the interiors.
I really appreciate reading this thread, as it brings me back to what it was like to be in SF in the 1960s. My family had moved to Los Altos/Mountain View (down the Peninsula) in 1961 as Dad had liked the area which he'd seen en route to the Pacific theatre in WWIl. Dad and Mom bought a house for $23,000 (I know, I know...); my aunt and family followed us out a few years later and settled initially in SF, so we'd go up to visit from time to time. They lived out towards Playland at the Beach and near GG Park and Cliff House, where we 12/13 year olds could go explore. I could go on, but mainly what I remember was the vibe of The City -- so different from what it's like there in these modern times.
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