The Craft of Everyday

Here is a short video I created along with my coworkers celebrating the craft of the everyday located around our office in Mumbai.

We had a limited amount of time to plan (2 days), shoot (1 day) and edit (4 days), but those constraints ended up making the process a lot of fun. At one point there was going to be a series of hand-carved frames in each shot highlighting the craft, but that became just impossible to execute and (as expected) drew a huge crowed.

Five of us got into a Toyota van and ran around the city for a day filming carpenters, frame wallahs, a paan wallah, a juice wallah, garland wallahs, and a sugarcane wallah. We used my 5d mark II camera and a host of lenses (18mm fisheye, 35mm f2.0, 50mm f1.4, 70-200mm f2.8 non-IS) in a pretty stripped down rig. I didn’t even have my Zacuto Z-Finder with me – so there was a lot of zooming in to focus and stopping down so the depth of field wasn’t too shallow.

It would have been nice to have a shoulder rig, which would have stabilized any moving shot, but we had to content ourselves with locking the camera down on a very lightweight tripod. This ended up being a blessing since we could set up and strike the set quickly, but also meant that we had to really strip down and constrain the shooting style.

Random Building, Mumbai

The building we visited named "Miriam" was next to the building named "Random" by plemeljr

The building we visited was named “Miriam.” This was next to the building named “Random.”

I love India.

Diwali must be Hindi for Explosives

Happy Diwali

Diwali is upon us – the Festival of Lights – where large candles are set out in the hallways and picture windows, lights are strung from buildings and small-calibre munitions are exploded throughout the dense metropolis. Instead of the infinite, and unending, sidewalk cricket matches sprinkled throughout the city, matches which make Test Cricket look like temporary vacations, the youth of the neighborhood cluster in an apparent attempt to catch my flat on fire.

Happy Diwali While I do have twelve floors in elevation on them, the amount of airborne explosions is shockingly high. For the last three nights fireworks have rained throughout the neighborhood, attesting to the unending supply of explosives and enthusiasum and the need to banish evil spirits. This confirms my suspicion that India celebrates better, or at least with better endurance than other countries I have visited. Why celebrate one night when you can celebrate five nights in a row?

At least the view is pretty.

I cannot begrudge the semi-professional firework displays, since after each blast the children of the neighborhood scream and cheer with such enthusiasm, their excitement filtering through the secondary explosions. While I prefer the sharing of sweets and welcoming the grace of Lakshmi and Ganesh to my door who will hopefully shower us with both wealth and auspicious beginnings, I’ll take the sound of children cheering any day.

Happy Diwali!

Happy Diwali

Security Guards

Security Guards

There are a lot of these "security guards" around Mumbai who sit and watch you (or more often talk with their friends) and write down the comings and goings in large ledgers.

Don’t know if this really does anything for security, but think if we could somehow find a way to aggregate the data!

Dhobi Ghat

Dhobi Ghat

Dhobi Ghat is the large, open-air laundromat in central Mumbai. This gentlemen’s job, seven days a week, is to scoop out the water in each of the concrete bins; water which contains all sorts of nasty chemicals.