Posted April 28, 201411 yr (part three) part 1- http://www.urbanohio.com/forum2/index.php?topic=29234.0 part 2- http://www.urbanohio.com/forum2/index.php?topic=29239.0
April 28, 201411 yr It is easy to forget how many quality 3-4 story structures have survived in Downtown Cincinnati. There was a time when Downtown and OTR were probably much less varied.
April 28, 201411 yr Ya did good. "You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers
April 30, 201411 yr If you don't mind my sincere questions - I noticed with some pics you've corrected the keystoning/perspective and others you haven't. Just wondering 1. what method you use and 2. what criteria do you use to decide which images get corrected? clevelandskyscrapers.com Cleveland Skyscrapers on Instagram
April 30, 201411 yr some pics you've corrected the keystoning/perspective and others you haven't. Just wondering 1. what method you use For the last few months I've been using the 'Free Transform' tool. 2. what criteria do you use to decide which images get corrected? A combination of a few things contribute: -not being able to make the perspective-corrected image look right to me -some images I like how the non-corrected version looks without changing it -sometimes the correction causes too much of the image to go away (and occasionally I think I'm just being lazy.)
May 19, 201411 yr The density in Cincinnati is fantastic I love it! I find in intriguing that for a southern Ohio city that Cincinnati has a very Easct Coast type feel with its architecture. A question I have though is did the Architect that designed this gem do Fenn tower in Cleveland? Or this one?
May 20, 201411 yr I believe George Post designed the Fenn Tower, Walter Ahlschlager is given credit for the Carew Tower, and the Cincinnati Gas & Electric Building is either John Russell Pope or Frederick Garber.
May 20, 201411 yr Well Summit Street - you have presented a legendary 3-set of photos of Cincy. I'm a Cleveland boy and have never been to Cincy. The differences between these two Ohio cities are mind boggling. I know Cinci was settled and founded a bit before Cleveland, but the amount of 1800's architecture that remains intact in Cinci vs. Cleveland is amazing. Cleveland, through several different paths, has destroyed much of its 1800's architecture. I look forward to visiting Cincy some day to admire the 1800's architecture. Thank you for this inspiring set.
May 20, 201411 yr These photos vividly demonstrate that Cincinnati has the architecture of a world-class city. Now if it can only return to being one...
Create an account or sign in to comment