16 Comments
Jul 16Liked by Alex Kustanovich

Very nice! And after the tour, who got dropped off first?

Expand full comment
author

My rigidly held beliefs got dropped off first. I feel so much lighter.

Expand full comment

Good to see the buildings through your eyes Alex.

Expand full comment
author

Thank you, Shital!

Expand full comment
Jul 16Liked by Alex Kustanovich

Great shots, Alex.

Expand full comment
author

Thanks very much, Marcel!

Expand full comment

Interesting pics and I loved how you discovered the city through the lens of architecture :)

Expand full comment
author

Thanks, Minaz, for reading and commenting!

Expand full comment

I love the way you describe why you have been drawn to architectural photography. It sums up how I feel.

Expand full comment
author

Thanks very much, Andrew!

Expand full comment

Nice, and I especially like the crane image and the bridge scene. For different reasons. The crane is unusual, the way the shapes combine to make the overall composition, where I go back and forth between soft-focusing my eyes and examining details closely. The bridge scene is, on the other hand, beautifully sculpted and soothing with the motion of the water. Raw vs refined, when I think of them generating distinct emotional reactions (in me).

Expand full comment
author

Thanks so much for your comment, Donn. I appreciate it. Glad you liked the photos!

Expand full comment
Jul 18Liked by Alex Kustanovich

Some beautiful images Alex. I really liked the bridge with star lights.

It reminds me I was once randomly photographing around Brussels and something caught my attention near the tops of the three to four story buildings on this street. I stood there snapping a few photos when a man approached me with a look like a light bulb had just appeared above his head. He told me has walked on this street every day for years and years, but never looked up in this spot before. He followed my line of site and explained how where I was photographing, there is a gap between two buildings that he had never seen or noticed. A seemingly small thing seemed to blow his mind as if to bring some novelty in his otherwise mundane commute.

Expand full comment
author

Thanks for your comment, Jason. Yeah, that’s what the camera is for, to capture things that cannot be seen with the naked eye.

Expand full comment

, love the perspective views

Expand full comment
author

Thank you, Lori!

Expand full comment