The stitching of the photos is very creative. As an anthropology student and photographer, I am fascinated day after day with your images. They are such a fabulous look into other cultures. I've spent a bit of time traveling in third world type locations, but I'm curious about your travels. You have been to places that are not generally open and accessible to foreign travelers. I know some of the places require special travel permits and usually require traveling in controlled groups. How do you manage such free access? In other words, how do I get your gig? Regards, Suzanne
05/11/05 04:51 PM
raul said...
None of the places I've been are very tightly controlled, they are just off the beaten track. My general travel strategy is to get a big map, find the smallest road, and go. It doesn't have to be Tibet or someplace foreign. I do the same thing in anywhere. Sometimes there is something, sometimes there is nothing, but getting there is the adventure.
05/10/05 09:31 AM
mikey said...
anoter great picture here, i love the colours.
05/10/05 01:49 PM
Anonymous said...
Interesting, artistic stitch - I like it. Nice photo. Nice capture of a very natural, everyday scene. I've voted for you!
05/10/05 01:53 PM
frisky? said...
really like how you presented this.
05/10/05 05:10 PM
Jordan said...
Wow! Great shots! I love how you have presented them here.
I love to see how the people react differently to your picture taking.
The important question is: how was the food?
05/10/05 11:36 PM
lydia said...
Nice colors and expressions.
were you trying to do a panoramic shot? that'd be cool!
05/11/05 02:13 AM
Matt said...
Great job on splitting this shot.
05/11/05 04:06 PM
the farmers wife said...
The stitching of the photos is very creative. As an anthropology student and photographer, I am fascinated day after day with your images. They are such a fabulous look into other cultures. I've spent a bit of time traveling in third world type locations, but I'm curious about your travels. You have been to places that are not generally open and accessible to foreign travelers. I know some of the places require special travel permits and usually require traveling in controlled groups. How do you manage such free access? In other words, how do I get your gig? Regards, Suzanne
05/11/05 04:51 PM
raul said...
None of the places I've been are very tightly controlled, they are just off the beaten track. My general travel strategy is to get a big map, find the smallest road, and go. It doesn't have to be Tibet or someplace foreign. I do the same thing in anywhere. Sometimes there is something, sometimes there is nothing, but getting there is the adventure.