John, Thanks for the reminder about your habs/haer work. I should read up on the projects, as much of what we are doing is not unlike that work. The reference material I have and use is a good indicator of what these places looked like when they were much younger - at least we do not have to deal with all the power lines and other distractions that the photographers of previous times did. Man, those were lines and poles..
Thanks again guys!!
HABS guidelines ..
about the power lines, and peeling paint, and shrubs ..
all those things make the building what it is today.
they are a testament to how the building evolved and should be included
no matter how one may think they are a distraction to the structure.
in reality, they aren't a distraction but add an important context
a context that can't really be glossed over / omitted or removed.
the way a habs works is from general to specific ...
there are context shots which show the building in its enviornment
so one gets a sense of place. all the distractions --- street furniture
mailboxes, telephone and electrical poles,
phone booths, cellphone towers + monopoles &C add to the "place"
since a community of people ( or other buildings )
may grow around the site being documented ...
after establishing how the building communicates with its surroundings,
the photographer gets closer to the building with 3/4 views ( 2 elevations )
or single elevations and then details that show how the building might have been constructed
windows, doorways, or features on-site that may be overlooked -like property markers
or landscape features that still add into the building as a whole and make it "work" ..
granted with a ULF camera it is quite expensive to make 2 or 3 or 6 views of a building's exterior
like a typical habs documentation ... so i guess it is one of those things that
you have to come to grips with how you want to present these churches,
in an romantic state, or ... in a way that people down the road can learn
how the churches were, and how they reacted to and with their environment.
after it is all said and done, sometimes the "distractions" tell more about the subject, than the subject.
good luck!
john