No Hottie Comments Please! This lovely girl was an absolute French Doll. I met her in the Louvre Museum in Paris when we were both looking at the Venus de Milo statue. After a little talking with her with her English speaking friends who helping translate, I asked if I could take a few photos we would share, and she liked the idea. Surprisingly shy, I snapped off a few in our mini photo shoot before the inevitable happened: A crowd gathered, she turned red in the face, laughed and then hid behind me - Very shy. By then, nobody was looking at the Venus de Milo stature she was standing next to, just her. Paris, France - JohnBrody.com - JohnBrody.blogspot.com
An eclectic Photography Blog with Galleries including Travel, Nature, Art and Beauty topics and locales. Fashion, Style & Animal images may also sneak in…. the list is long. Pretty much anything beautiful or interesting will attract my lens. Visit and share my Hi-Res photos at JohnBrodyPhotography.com and feel free to use them as personal wallpapers on your devices, nothing commercial, please... We look forward to your visits!
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Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Sacre Coeurs Photograph From Nearby Hi-Rise Rooftop - Finally, An Eye Level View...
A couple blocks and a few elevators later, she walked me though her office space and out on to a rooftop patio that had a stunning 180 degree view, the centerpiece being Sacre Coeur directly in front of me. She saw my thrilled look, gave me a hug, waved me out onto the patio and disappeared to get on with running her business. A couple hours and a couple hundred photos later I found her in her design studio, thanked her hugely, got another hug and headed on my way... Whoever started that rumor that the french are rude and arrogant experienced a different France than I did. Kindness like this lady's is common and I had nothing but good experiences.
One warning about Sacre Coeur... Don't go there on weekends or holidays. On weekends ALL streets near Sacre Coeur look like the photo below, so adjust your schedule accordingly.
A bit of Sacre Coeur history:
Montmartre is a hill which is 130 meters high, giving its name to the surrounding district, in the north of Paris in the 18th arrondissement, a part of the Right Bank. Montmartre is primarily known for the white-domed Basilica of the Sacre Coeur on its summit and as a nightclub district. The other, older, church on the hill is Saint Pierre de Montmartre, which claims to be the location at which the Jesuit order of priests was founded. Many artists had studios or worked around the community of Montmartre such as Salvador Dalí, Amedeo Modigliani, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso and Vincent van Gogh. Montmartre is also the setting for several hit films.
Sacre Coeur, the full name being The Basilica of the Sacred Heart of Jesus of Paris, is a Roman Catholic church and minor basilica, dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Paris, France. An extremely popular landmark (see my crowd photo above for proof of this), the basilica is located at the summit of the butte Montmartre, the highest point in the city. The view is beautiful from the top, but it's not for the weak of leg or large in size - I could barely force my way through some of the stairways during my ascent.
Not Photoshop - Glass Cover on Art Gallery Chopin Painting Reflected Paris Street and Archtecture
A real simple shot I couldn't pass up - Walking by a painting of Chopin by Delecroix I notice the reflection of the buildings and the classic Paris architecture. When I focused my camera on the reflection instead of the painting, the street scene became dominant and Chopin faded into a transluscent image that seemed to be watching over his chosen new city. Just a change of look from a straight photo... JohnBrody.com
Saturday, July 24, 2010
Louvre Moonrise at 4am - Obviously, in Paris France - JohnBrody.com
Moonrise over the Louvre at 4am in the morning. One thing they don't mention is that there are NO available taxis at 4am. I waited for a half hour and then picked up my monster tripod and 35 pound gearbag and started walking, and I'd already been shooting for 18 hours - An hour and 3 miles later I was at my hotel. Not fun, so plan ahead - Click for full sized Hi-Res Image - JohnBrody.com - JohnBrody.blogspot.com
Monday, June 21, 2010
Pont Neuf Bridge with Midnight Moonrise - JohnBrody.com

Midnight Moonrise Over Pont Neuf Bridge in Paris. This is my personal "Center" of Paris and my favorite location on this globe. An architechtural gem, bustling with activity and a view of everything 'Paris'... Per request I'm adding photo data: Canon 5D Mark II, Shutter 1.6 seconds, Aperture 9.0, ISO 1600, Focal Length 68mm. Cheers.
--- Interesting reading: A few tidbits about Pont Neuf's curious and sometimes deadly history:
All through the eighteenth century, the Pont Neuf was the center of Paris, lively with both crime and commerce: Czar Peter the Great, who came to study French civilization under the regency of the Duke d'Orleans, declared that he had found nothing more curious in Paris than the pont Neuf; and, sixty years later, the philosopher Benjamin Franklin wrote to his friends in America that he had not understood the Parisian character except in crossing the pont Neuf.
In 1862, Édouard Fournier traced its history in his lively two-volume Histoire du Pont-Neuf. He describes how, even before it was completed (in 1607), gangs hid out in and around it and robbed and murdered people. It remained a dangerous place even as it became busier. For a long time, the bridge even had its own gallows.
This did not prevent people from congregating there, drawn by various stands and street performers (acrobats, fire-eaters, musicians, etc.) Charlatans and quacks of various sorts were also common, as well as the hustlers (shell-game hucksters, etc) and pickpockets often found in crowds - not to mention a lively trade in prostitution. Among the many businesses which, however unofficially, set up there were several famous tooth pullers.
In 1701, Cotolendi quoted a letter supposedly written by a Sicilian tourist: One finds on the Pont-Neuf an infinity of people who give tickets, some put fallen teeth back in, and others make crystal eyes; there are those who cure incurable illnesses; those who claim to have discovered the virtues of some powdered stones to white and to beautify the face. This one claims he makes old men young; there are those who remove wrinkles from the forehead and the eyes, who make wooden legs to repair the violence of bombs; finally everybody is so applied to work, so strongly and continually, that the devil can tempt no one but on Holidays and Sundays.
With its numerous sellers of pamphlets and satirical performers, it was also a center for social commentary: In the 16th cent, the Pont-Neuf was the scene of the recitals of Tabarin, a famous satirist of the day, and it was long afterwards the favourite rendezvous of news-vendors, jugglers, showmen, loungers, and thieves. Any popular witticism in verse was long known as un Pont-Neuf.
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If you haven't been there you must visit if you get a chance... JohnBrody.com
Brave Bicycle Girl Has Pont Neuf Bridge All To Herself - JohnBrody.com
Simple shot that I like and I don't know why... Probably all the photos I've seen by many of the great French photographers on the same subject... JohnBrody.com
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Pere Lachaise Cemetery - Paris Photos and Info - John Brody Photography
These photos and history profiles of some my favorite highlights from Paris are being added here by request - by demand actually... Some playfully nasty letters from some Paris lovers have been hitting my inbox because they're not too happy that I shut down a web site that used to contain some of this travel info and pictures. So here you go you cranky Francophiles, Enjoy yourselves! ;)

Pere Lachaise Cemetery - A Brief History
In the early days Pere Lachaise was a poor district, with many outlaws, winding streets, shady avenues. It's located on a old hill of Champ l'Eveque where a rich merchant built his house in 1430.
In the 17th century the Jesuits, converted it into a hospice for members of their order. It became a meeting place under influence of Pere Lachaise Louis XIV's confessor. In 1803, under Napoleon, the Prefect of Paris bought it to build a cemetery. It was an incredibly successful piece of land speculation. Nicolas Frochot, the urban planner who bought the land, persuaded the civil authorities to rebury Molière, La Fontaine, Abelard and Heloise in his new cemetery. Pere-Lachaise became the ultimate symbol for the rich and successful.
Ironically, Frochot even sold a plot to the original owner for considerably more money than the price he had paid for the entire site. Even today, the rates are still extremely high. Some of the most celebrated dead have unremarkable tombs while those whose fame died with them or who were nonentities to start with have the most expressive monuments.
A winding stone pathway through the cemetery above and the grave of chopin at left. As with all pictures here click to go to full sized photo album.
- John Brody Photography
Pere Lachaise Cemetery - A Brief History
In the early days Pere Lachaise was a poor district, with many outlaws, winding streets, shady avenues. It's located on a old hill of Champ l'Eveque where a rich merchant built his house in 1430.
In the 17th century the Jesuits, converted it into a hospice for members of their order. It became a meeting place under influence of Pere Lachaise Louis XIV's confessor. In 1803, under Napoleon, the Prefect of Paris bought it to build a cemetery. It was an incredibly successful piece of land speculation. Nicolas Frochot, the urban planner who bought the land, persuaded the civil authorities to rebury Molière, La Fontaine, Abelard and Heloise in his new cemetery. Pere-Lachaise became the ultimate symbol for the rich and successful.
A winding stone pathway through the cemetery above and the grave of chopin at left. As with all pictures here click to go to full sized photo album.
- John Brody Photography
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