Photographer’s Note
The exterior shot is in the ws so please have a look. This is a rested shot with an exposure time of 1.3 seconds, for some reason it did not populate the data base here on the TE site.
The history below is from Wikipedia.
Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo was first established on June 3, 1770 in Monterey, California, and was named for Charles Borromeo, Archbishop of Milan, Italy. It was the site of the first Christian confirmation in Alta California.[4] The following year, the Mission moved to its present location near the present-day town of Carmel-by-the-Sea. The original site continued to operate as a chapel and later became the Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo. "Mission Carmel" as it came to be known, was Father Junípero Serra's favorite, and being close to Monterey (the capital of Alta California) became his headquarters. When he died on August 28, 1784 he was buried in the chapel.
The Esselen and Ohlone Indians who lived near the Mission were taken in and trained as plowmen, shepherds, cattle herders, blacksmiths, and carpenters. They made adobe bricks, roof tiles and tools needed to build the Mission. In the beginning, the Mission relied on bear meat from Mission San Antonio de Padua and supplies brought by ship from Mission San Diego de Alcalá. In 1794, the population reached its peak of 927, but by 1823 the total had dwindled to 381. On November 20, 1818 French privateer Hipólito Bouchard raided the nearby Presidio of Monterey in Monterey, California. The Mission was in ruins when the Roman Catholic Church regained control of it in 1863. In 1884 Father Angel Casanova undertook the work of restoration. In 1931, Monsignor Philip Scher appointed Harry Downie to be curator in charge of Mission restoration; it became an independent parish two years later. In 1961, the Mission was designated as a Minor Basilica by Pope John XXIII.
Today, Mission Carmel is one of the most popular tourist sites on the Monterey Peninsula and is a National Historic Landmark. It is a place of pilgrimage for visitors from all over the world. In 1987, Pope John Paul II visited the Mission as part of his U.S. tour. It is also a busy and active parish church of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Monterey.
Budapestman, jlbrthnn, adores, john_c, amaryllis, snuggleaphagus has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
Budapestman
(41618) 2007-09-05 2:00
Hi Greg,
Excellent architecture shot, I like the many beautiful details and the spectacular perspective. POV is very attractive, clarity and lights superb. Note is splendid and informative. Very fine image, Congratulations. Have a nice day
George
bracasha75
(21977) 2007-09-05 9:56
Hello Greg
I nou this typ of missions only from tv and i,m glad to see once in this site..
Very well done
Cheers,Braca
dareco
(17104) 2007-09-06 0:28
Incredible history. I really like the exterior as well. This interior looks HUGE! I really like the lighting! The details on the alter are so clear for being so far away. Excellent!! TFS
jlbrthnn
(37657) 2007-09-06 7:45
Hello Greg,
In this photograph, all is beautiful. The lights pass from blue to orange, of the cold to the heat. Architecture is remarkable, in particular the vault, very original. very good clearness makes it possible to perceive the details of the bottom and the altar. Cheer, it is a very good framing and also a good realization.
Good Day
Cordially
Joel
adores
(15469) 2007-09-06 16:28
Hi Greg!
Very good shot with a good light, which is hard in these places.I like the details, especially the altar and the ceiling. Different from our carmels here. The exterior is also very beautiful.
amaryllis
(17361) 2007-09-06 22:55
bonjour,
très belle réalisation de cet intérieur d'église jamais facile à capter, mais la netteté et la luminosité sont parfaites
Intérieur magnifique, l'autel également
merci de ta note interessante et bonne journée
juliette
john_c
(24635) 2007-09-07 7:25
Hi Greg,
Good depth in this interior shot, with many details seen with fine clarity. I especially like the sheen on the pews in the foreground. Considering the relative dark conditions here, you managed the exposure well. A fine capture...later.
John
snuggleaphagus
(4138) 2007-09-23 7:28
I was staring at the thumbnail of your photo for a while thinking this place is so familiar to me, after a minute or so I opened and realised I had taken a similar photo of this place a while ago. I really like how you achieved a sense of symmetry without having taken from the absolute center of the church. The light falling on the pwes is quite pretty and I like how the altar can be so sharply seen. Well done, this is scuh a pretty and simple church and your photo brings out its beauty.
amstel
(2252) 2008-05-01 17:59
hi Greg,
Nice and a bit unusual indoor picture. The sharpness and light is good, yet the composition is somewhat not typical. I would refrain myself from taking picture including rows of benches in the foreground, especially so well exposed. And in my opinion, the vertical composition would do the trick better, taking into consideration the arches as well as the rest of the structural features of the church.
Cheers
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Greg Davis (Greg1949)
(8507) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2006-11-30
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Nikon D 200, 18-200 1:3.5-5.6 DX VR, Digital RAW
- Exposure: f/3.5, 1 seconds
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version, Workshop
- Date Submitted: 2007-09-05 1:14
Discussions
- To gunbud: Tom, (1)
by Greg1949, last updated 09-25 18:40 - To snuggleaphagus: Christina (2)
by Greg1949, last updated 09-23 08:13 - To amaryllis: Julie (1)
by Greg1949, last updated 09-07 00:31








