Visual Description: Four distinct exposures make up one multiple exposed image.

Process:

DOWN THE STREET

35mm MULTIPLE EXPOSURE

Text to come…

Visual Description: A cutout of the island of Manhattan rotated to make the avenue grid parallel to the horizon, placed on top of large letters spelling Manhattan. 3rd Avenue is highlighted in white and boxed by an orange dashed box, which is dublicated below made bigger so show a section of the cross streets, starting, not at the beginning of 3rd Ave, but at E15 Street and counting up to E125.

Visual Description: Diagram of 3rd Ave, on the top shows how the first exposure of the film (35mm) was from E15 to E42 Street, the second E43 to E70, the third E71 to E97, the fourth E98 to E125. Below are four examples of the view at the cross streets. All are seen from 3rd Ave looking East down the middle of the street. In the corner of the photos, the street number is indicated. The photos are screenshots from Google Earth, from 2014, the year this project was done.

Visual Description: Diagram showing how the section of 3rd Ave is divided into the four exposure zones, then rolled around each other. This corresponds to the camera being landscape for exposure one, portrait (turned left) for exposure two, landscape (upside-down) for exposure three, porrait (turned right) for exposure four.

Visual Description: Diagram showing the orientation of the camera during the 4 exposure zones, below the camera is an example of the street view, with framing shown in dashed lines, pulled out below. The photos shown as they appear on the film in the camera.

Diagram. left-side: the four individual exposures, from each exposure zone, lined up behind each other. On the right, the combined images they produce: the mixture of exposure I + II, then I + II + III, and last I + II + III + IV.

Visual Description: Diagram, on the left, the four individual exposures, one from each exposure zone, are lined up behind each other. On the right, the combined images they produce: the mixture of exposure I + II, then I + II + III, and last I + II + III + IV. Only the last image is ever seen when the completed roll of film is developed.