Istanbul – Hagia Sophia

February 21, 2012

When I entered Hagia Sophia for the first time I was stunned by the rays of light that filled the huge room above the low hanging chandeliers. Unfortunately there were already a lot of tourists walking around so that I decided to come back the next morning and to be the first inside. Hagia Sophia used to be a Byzantine Church, later a Mosque and today it is a museum.

Hagia Sophia

Hagia Sophia

Early Morning at Hagia Sophia

Early Morning at Hagia Sophia

Light Beam

Light Beam

Hagia Sophia - Low Chandeliers

Hagia Sophia - Low Chandeliers

Rays of Light in Hagia Sophia

Rays of Light in Hagia Sophia

Filed under: Allgemein,City,Street Photography,Travel,Turkey — Tags: , , — Andreas @ 1:01 PM

Istanbul – sightseeing

Istanbul at Sunset with Galata Bridge (from Galata Tower)

Istanbul at Sunset with Galata Bridge (from Galata Tower)

At least for me Istanbul does not have a structured cityscape and i could not find THE view when looking into google’s picture search. But maybe this is what characterizes the city. However I was pretty sure that the “blue hour method” would work out well, as it always does. The first day we were on the Galata Tower we were too early and it was quite cloudy. The second day the circumstances were better: I had a tripod with me, it was short to sunset and the sky was clear. It is almost impossible to enjoy the cityscape from the viewing platform as it is very very poky up there so that you will be  jostled involuntarily by people who want to pass you. But this did not bother me: I waited as long as I had to wait standing there with my tripod and I finally took the pictures that were later stitched with Hugin.   And when looking at the result there seems to be structure: it is the mosques that dominate the cityscape. From left to right: Topkapi palace, Hagia Sophia, Sultanahmed Mosque, Nuruosmaniye Mosque, Yeni Mosque, Beyazit Tower (green) and Süleymaniye Mosque. The Galata Bridge is connecting the Old City and Galata.

Street in Galata

Street in Galata

 

Tea in Bazaar

Tea in Bazaar

 

Tea in Bazaar

Preparing Tea and Promegranate Juice

Galata and Bosporus

Galata and Bosporus

Grand Bazaar

Grand Bazaar

Yeni Mosque

Yeni Mosque and Galata Bridge

 

Filed under: City,Street Photography,Travel,Turkey — Tags: , , , , , , — Andreas @ 12:25 PM

Istanbul – a first impression

Living in Nürnberg does also mean living together not only with native “Nürnbergers” but also with people from Greece, Italy, Ukraine and East European states, besides of people that relocated within Germany. But the major part of people from foreign countries come from Turkey, so that turkish language is ubiquitous on the streets of Nürnberg and Fürth. Maybe this is why Turkish Airlines offers direct flights from Nürnberg to Istanbul twice a day for a reasonable rate. And so my sister, her husband and me decided to spend a long weekend in Istanbul, an oriental world that is only separated from Nürnberg by a 2.5 hour flight.

on the airplane

With Turkish Airlines to Istanbul

Arcade near the shopping street

Arcade near the shopping street

Entrance to a Restaurant

Entrance to a Restaurant

What was obvious was the fact that roughly 13 million people  want to be fed. The main shopping street and its side roads are stuffed with kebaps, turkish fast food and fish restaurants, confectionaries and little carts selling roast chestnuts. Most of the meals contain fresh vegetables, goat cheese, white bread and nuts or pistachios.

Saray at shopping street

Saray at shopping street

 

Saray at Shopping Street

Saray at Shopping Street

Women preparing food in a window

Women preparing food in a window

It was the first time I left my Nikon D300 at home and only took the Fuji X100 with me. It is much lighter, smaller and has a superb image quality. I even dared to use the camera’s internal film simulation modes (Velvia, Astia, Provia and B&W) from time to time and saved some of the images in jpg only.

Filed under: City,Street Photography,Travel,Turkey — Tags: , — Andreas @ 10:14 AM
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