Jackson, Mississippi, is fun for my type of photography because so much of the city is rough (I am trying to be polite). Let's continue our explorations using the Hasselblad XPan panoramic camera. Here are some examples of south Jackson around South State Street and Gallatin Street. This frames are from Kodak Portra 160 film, expired since 2013 but frozen for all of its life. Click any picture to expand it to 2400 pixels.
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South State Street view north (45mm F/4 lens at ƒ/11) |
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Anyone here? 330 S. Rankin Street, Jackson |
South State Street was once prosperous and lined with car dealers and various other businesses. Not today. Heading west, South Rankin Street may be even more desolate. I took black and white photographs here in
2020.
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South Gallatin Street view north (45mm lens) |
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Warehouses, South Gallatin Street |
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Addison Auto Body, 828 S. Gallatin Street (30mm ƒ/5.6 lens) |
Turn north on South Gallatin Street, and there is a bit more commercial activity. The road dips under the early-20th century railroad girder overpass, which is in regular use. I have photographed along here in the
past.
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South State Street (BW400CN film, Voigtländer Vito BL camera, 50mm ƒ/3.5 Color-Skopar lens) |
As a comparison, here is the view of South State Street taken on black and white film with my 1959 Voigtländer Vito BL camera and its 4-element 50mm ƒ/3.5 Color-Skopar lens. The XPan's lenses are modern, sophisticated, and amazingly capable on the 68mm wide frame, but this simple 4-element Skopar (a Tessar-type of design) holds its own for the normal 35mm frame.
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Railroad overpass, S. Gallatin at W. Porter Street (TMax 100 film, Rolleiflex 3.5E 75mm Xenotar lens, 1/250 ƒ8, yellow filter) |
Here is the north side of the railroad bridge where West Porter Street intersects South Gallatin. This is from my 1959 Rolleiflex camera. Hmmm, how come this "antique" equipment works?
Standby for more Jackson photographs next week.
2 comments:
Is that a corvette up there?
Rodney, it is (or was) a Corvette. It has been up on that post for decades. A car restoration/sales company occupied the building and lot years ago. This area was once more prosperous. The Moak Volvo dealer was across the street, but they moved closer to I-55 years ago.
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