Kodachrome and Velvia San Francisco No. 1 — a visual preeminence

St. Ignatius Church, San Francisco, CA, August 26, 1994: click for larger image

Somewhere around late 1993 or early 1994, I discovered slide film, and specifically Kodachrome and Fuji Velvia transparency film, and for the next few years I shot a ton of slides in and around San Francisco. Digging around for the image of the drive-in movie theater previously posted, I started to memory-lane flip through the various binders of old slides, and scanned a bunch into the computer. So over the next few days I’ll present some of them here.

The above photo is of St. Ignatius Church, on the campus of the University of San Francisco. Though I shot this particular photo from the roof of the apartment building I was living in at the time, on the corner of Hayes and Cole (2085 Hayes St., if any of my readers from San Francisco are curious), this shot is more of less the same view that I had from my room, and was one of the best things about this particular apartment. The church is at the top of one of San Francisco’s many hills, and our flat being two blocks down this hill, the church’s physical location lent it a certain visual preeminence over my life there, even to a non-believer like me, which I think the photo captures. I have a lot of slides of this church, and quite a few with vivid skies such as this one, which I haven’t doctored up in Photoshop. I do have to say that San Francisco and the surrounding area has some of the best twilight a photographer could ever hope for.

With respect to the church, this particular structure dates from 1914, and is the fifth incarnation of the Jesuit church, which was established in San Francisco in 1855. Their third building, which was located at Hayes and Van Ness Avenue, was destroyed by a fire following the great 1906 earthquake, as can be seen in this historic photograph.

Drive-ins and SARS

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I saw a news story on Japanese tv the other day about makeshift drive-in movie theaters that have started to spring up in China, on account of SARS and the fear of enclosed spaces (many indoor theaters have been closed by government order). The story reminded me of the above photo I took in 1994 (September 11, 1994 to be exact), in Santa Cruz, California. This theater, which I believe is (or was?) Skyline Drive-in on Soquel Drive, was showing Oliver Stone’s Natural Born Killers on this day. I wonder if this theater is still around, 9 years later?

A night out, unaware the earth was moving under our feet

Dining out photos, taken at Urawa Royal Pines Hotel, May 26, 2003

The big news yesterday was the 7.0 earthquake that rocked northern Japan, and was strongly felt here in the Tokyo area. Strongly felt by most but not by Naoko and I, for we were on a train at the time (6:24pm) and were completely unaware until we got off the train and realized that both of us had been called by my mother-in-law, who most surely did feel the quake.

okaasan was home watching Kaika, for I had a rare weekday night off and I took advantage of that to spring a surprise “I’m taking you out to dinner tonight” on Naoko. I promised myself a no-moblog evening, but I did snap some mobile phone photos of the occassion which is what you see above. I took Naoko to a restaurant on the 19th floor of the Urawa Royal Pines Hotel, 10 or so minutes up the road (although from where we’re at, we actually have to take three trains to get there!). I have Gary to thank for tipping me off to this restaurant and it’s reasonable ¥4,800 (about $41 US) fixed price dinner course. I’m not a sophisticate when it comes to food, so I can’t really discuss the quality of the meal, but the food was delicious, the service was top-notch, and the atmosphere very enjoyable. And there’s just something about a view, even if it is of a surburban Tokyo sprawl on a cloudy night, that makes it all alright. (I will add that it was fortuitous the earthquake hit before we made it to the restaurant. I don’t think the evening would have been so enjoyable had we experienced the swaying of the building during the temblor.)

But mainly it was just nice for Naoko and I to spend a few hours together and not have to worry about attending to Kaika. Naoko was a bit taken a back by it all, I guess she’s not used to me pulling surprises like this (note self: fix that), and was amazed I could arrange for her parents to watch Kaika and reserve the restaurant all by myself without her getting wind of it.