Sunday, November 13, 2011

Special Subsidised Menu for students


Bhatkal is a small but historical town on NH17 as you drive from Udipi to Murudeshwar. We spent some time in this town exploring some ancient Jain and Hindu temples, besides some mosques. see pictures at : http://bit.ly/tupuLa
Bhatkal, being predominantly Muslim town, we were little apprehensive of finding a decent Vegetarian hotel in this town. Soon we learnt that, in Uttara kannada, that is not a problem. Hotel Shrinivas Deluxe served a decent lunch for the hungry bunch. What amused me was the board near the counter (see picture) announcing special menu and concessional prices for the students. The owner, obviously a follower of Baba Ramdev, proudly added that he is doing this as a service. May his tribe increase!

Monday, March 09, 2009

Attukal Pongala - an event to remember

Scenes from a day before (9th March 2009)

Attukal Pongala is held in Trivandrum during February - March at the premises of the Attukal Devi Temple. Last year, 25 lakh (2.5 million) women perfomed 'pongala'. This event has been seen and intrepreted in different angles, religious, spiritul, feminism, socialogical etc. To me, a city with a permanent population of about 8 lakhs, hosting an event where 3 times the numbers participate, it a challenge in management - civic, logistics, law and order, environment, public health, etc.
Women line up the pavements in Thampanoor, 2-3 kms away from the temple, the day before the event.






Brisk sale of clay pots in progress.---->




<-Pongala devotees staking their claim for position one day before the event, in front of Trivandrum Central Railway station






An image of Devi annihilating the demon -->



Saturday, February 03, 2007

Theppam festival at Mylapore Kapali temple 2007

Theppam
(click picture to view the full album)

The annual float festival in the Kapliswarar tank is held normally for three days starting from Thai Poosam (February?) . On the first day, Kapaleeswarar and Karpagambal are taken on the float. On the second day, Murugan with Valli Devyanai are taken. The float is constructed on several barrels. Vedic scholars and musicians travel along with the float which goes for three rounds starting after dusk and ending around 9-30 p.m. Here are some images of the second day(2007). After a long gap, the tank is having water only in the last two years.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Mylapore Collage

A collage of images in and around the Kapali Temple during evening hours. (Chennai , India) Preparing for the Mylapore Festival. Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

An Indian amateur photographer in the '60s





This picture of Gandhi Mandapam through the gate was taken by me in 1966 when I was a student of Engineering at the AC Colelge of Technology which was just opposite to this. The camera was a heirloom Kodak Duaflex. This is a hip level viewing twin lens reflex camera, focus free and fixed exposure (+bulb). It take 12 exposures In sqare format (6cm x 6cm) on a 620 size roll film.The film itself was 6cm x 72 cm and some other cameras use the same film in different formats - 8 exposures of 6cm x 9 cm or 16 exposures of 4.5cm x 6 cm .

Click here to view an image of the camera

( a contact print)
Only B&W films were available in India then. 620 size film also was not very common, but it was identical to 120 film but for the spool. I used to save old 620 spools and request the studio to rewind 120 film on 620 spools, if the latter was not available. see: http://camerapedia.wikia.com/wiki/620_film


Flash: Photogrphy itself was a luxury then. Flash for an amateur was the ultimate. We had disposable flash bulbs which had a long filament coiled inside a bulb. The flash bulbs were very expensive and many may be wasted due to mistakes of the photographer or the manufacturer. sometimes the ejector mechanism in th eflashholder may not work and one had to wait till the fused bulb to cool before replacing for the next shot. I never tried them anyway.

Periodicals: We had no access to any magazine dedicated to photography. If you were lucky some friend or relative would give you a foreign photo journal which was as prized a possession as a smuggled copy of 'Playboy'

Agfa India used to bring out a small newsletter with useful tips. Though this was free, the distributors were relcutant to give out to bumbling young amateurs.

Journals like 'Illustrated Weekly of India' had works of leading photographers. I remember the works of Krishnan and his wild life. fortunatley I had access to old issues of 'Life' and 'National Geographic' from my uncle's collection.

Double exposure:since Duaflex had a manual advance (like all cameras then) many times you end up with multiple exposures on single frame accidentally. Occasionally,you can put this to creative use too.

Cost: Every roll of film which we exposed over several months, used to put a big hole in our allowances and we often felt guilty about spending. However, the shared joy of the family in seeing the results more than compensated for this.http://camerapedia.wikia.com/wiki/620_film