Wednesday 28 October 2009

Doorways: Dolphin Cottage

As I got ready to photograph this rather striking doorway, in an otherwise somewhat rundown street, a couple in their fifties stopped so they didn’t intrude onto my shot. Knowing my propensity for fiddling around with different settings, I said something like ‘come by, it’s no trouble, I might be awhile’.

There was then a minute of British ‘no, no really, it’s no trouble’ on both sides, to the point where I just wanted to say, actually, it makes me quite uncomfortable having two people standing and staring at me whilst I’m trying to take a photo.

Although obviously, not as uncomfortable as it would’ve done before I went to China.

After this polite agonising the couple went to walk past me, and the man asked what I was photographing. ‘What do you want to do that for,’ was his response. His wife then made a spirited defence of the merits of the door as a photographic subject, and, standing right in front of me, they had a self-contained, but rather heated, argument about this.

I had a few minutes of thinking, ‘well, this isn’t a situation you find covered in photography books’ and feeling exceptionally awkward, before they moved off without acknowledging me.

So far, I’m feeling that this incident sums up my week: things almost go right, and then…

9 comments:

  1. Interesting doorway. I like the dolphins on either side and the contrast of black and white.
    Funny about the bickering couple.

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  2. That's a very elegant door and surrounding wall. Is it common in the UK to have a name for one's house? Does it hearken back to times when the nobility had names for their "houses"? I knew a guy from Belfast, Northern Ireland back in the 1960s when I lived in Ireland whose family's house was called "Rosemount House." I thought it was strange to have a name for your house. You don't see that here in the US.

    The couple arguing about the value of photographing doors must have deeper issues! Control? Art versus pragmatism/functionality? Awkward situation for you, but funny to us, your readers. :)

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  3. Don't you love the way that there is a small story to go with each picture you take?
    Very smart door, I thought you were going to tell us that it was their door.

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  4. Having a name for your house reminds me of the differences in relationships with freeways of southern Californians versus northern Californians. Southern Californians have names for their freeways: "the San Bernardino Freeway" instead of I-10, "the Santa Monica Freeway," "the Riverside Freeway," etc. I think they have an emotional attachment to their freeways! Here in northern California, freeways are only called by their numbers: I-80, 50, 99, etc. I grew up as a SoCal girl, but I've now lived more of my life in NorCal, so I'm a northern Californian....strictly numbers for fwys for me!

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  5. Pat - it's quite common for houses to have names, particularly Victorian or older houses. Perhaps a snob element, also before formal street numbering became the norm. In rural wales, houses are known by name rather than a number.

    Janei - I am considering taking out relate (marriage counselling service) with me!

    Moannie - Certainly, I will not forget this door now. It would've been funny/embarrassing if they'd lived there too!

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  6. Nice door no doubt....But i enjoyed the story much :)

    These things are very common...people even start complaining when they found someone around them with camera in public places like bust stop, park....
    but it has its own charm... :)

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  7. Wonderful anecdote to go with your door photo! I could read a whole book of such incidents (with pictures, of course), if you happened to collect more and published them. The little story speaks volumes.

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  8. What an astute observation. How many of us have been right there!? Here's hoping the next few days finish the sentence with "it got even better!"

    Cheer!

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  9. Bizarre situation indeed. I've also found that taking photos sparks off weird conversations.

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