5(+5) Digital-IR Frames from a Roving CoolPix 990 in Paris

By Dave Powell

Before Kate and I went to Paris in 2010, a good friend visited one of my digital-infrared exhibits and– the following Christmas– gave me a Nikon CoolPix 990 that he’d converted to digital-IR! The camera may only have a 3.4MP sensor, but it’s still a favorite IR shooter.

Here are 5 (+5) favorite shots from my Roving CoolPix 990’s adventures in Paris. (They aren’t post-processed or colorized in any way.)

“Vintage” Notre Dame

Below is the first infrared photo that I took in the city. The “native” IR tones rendered by the camera’s CCD sensor were gorgeously “antiquarian”… and certainly suited the subject. I also love how beautifully the camera rendered a gloomy sky:

Notre Dame before the filre

Shot only a few years before Notre Dame’s terrible fire, this remains one of my favorite IR images and a cherished souvenir of our trip.

“The” Tower

One must get close to the Eiffel Tower to appreciate how HUGE it is. Distant landscape views don’t do it justice:

Leg of tthe Eiffel Tower

Yes, those are buildings at its feet– not pylons. And you can just make out people along the bottom of the photo.

As you see below, Le Jardins du Trocadéro offer one of the best spots in the city for viewing the Tower and its nightly light show:

The Eiffel Tower from the Trocadero

Note the “square  bullseye” pavement patterns in the foreground. You’ll see them again later. Also note the Tower’s lower two viewing platforms. I took the following look-up shot from the larger, lower platform that’s just above the Tower’s massive arched legs:

A couple looking out toward Paris from the Eiffel Tower

In these days of super-long zooms, 4X doesn’t seem like much. This couple was enjoying the vista from the Tower’s higher, smaller viewing platform. And as you can see in my distant view of the Tower, they were quite a ways above me!

But the CoolPix 990’s 4X zoom did an awesome job. It also captured a striking “wishbone-beam” architectural feature that I’d never noticed before. Though it stands out above, it’s nearly invisible in distance shots.

And here’s the view back toward the Trocadéro from the top of the Tower. I was frankly astounded that my fear of heights never kicked in. (The massive open-air girders all around me no doubt helped.):

The Trocadero from the Eiffel Tower

If you look closely at the ground between– and slightly in front of– those curved colonnades, you can just make out the three “square bullseye” pavement patterns that I mentioned before. In that earlier shot, the Tower looks very close, but as you see here, it’s not.

Created for the 1937 World’s Fair, the Trocadéro gardens cover nearly 10,000 square meters of green space in the heart of the city. Water fountains abound. And by December, the entire area transforms into a holiday paradise that must be experienced.

Les Bouquinistes

Since the 16th century, sellers of used/antiquarian books, maps and prints have set up shop along both sides of the Seine: on the Right Bank, from the Pont Marie to the Quai du Louvre, and on the Left Bank, from the Quai de la Tournelle to Quai Voltaire:

Paris booksellers along the Seine

According to the Bouquinistes’ wiki page, this is why the Seine is often called “the only river in the world that runs between two bookshelves.”

In a “Perfume Garden”

I don’t know how this garden is used today, but when we visited, it showcased the wide variety of plants used in French perfumes!:

"Perfume Garden" stairs

There’s also a charming view of the Eiffel Tower from here.

Le Parc des Buttes-Chaumont

Spanning 61 acres in the 19th arrondissement, this is one of the largest and most unique parks in the city. But prior to its 1867 opening (during Napoleoon III’s regime), it was a horrific place where nobody wanted to go:

Mountain and pavilion in Buttes Chaumonte park

That’s because, at various times, the area had hosted a stone quarry, city dump, horse abattoir, and gibbet building (where criminals were executed and their bodies displayed to discourage potential neer-do-wells).

But during his transformation of the city into the beautiful place we now enjoy, Baron Haussmann (the Prefet of Paris) utterly transformed this eyesore area into a fascinating man-made park. Even its benches are made from faux-bois (fake-wood) tree branches and logs.

And atop its artificial mountain rising from a man-made lake, the Temple de la Sibylle seen above has become a popular spot for formal wedding photos– if one can handle the 50-meter climb in tuxedos, suits and wedding dresses!

Le Musée Bourdelle

This museum and sculpture garden were Antoine Bourdelle’s studio from 1885 to 1929:

In the Bourdelle sculpture garden

Bourdelle studied under Auguste Rodin, and taught both Alberto Giacometti and Henri Matisse. He also created the beautiful bust of Gustave Eiffel that’s installed at the base of “The Tower.” Lovers of Art Deco and Beaux-Arts sculpture will delight in the 15th arrondissement’s Musée Bourdelle.

Des Galeries Lafayette

Digital infrared doesn’t always work well indoors. So in this spectacularly beautiful shopping destination, I decided to see what would happen if I removed the camera’s opaque IR filter. In a word… magic!:

In the Galerie Lafayette

I don’t think anyone would dispute Paris’s classic beauty. And my Roving CoolPix 990 only seemed to enhance it.

Next Time: Venice!

–Dave Powell is a Westford, Mass., writer and avid amateur photographer.

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About The Author

By Dave Powell
Trained in mathematics, physics, cosmology, computer programming and science journalism. Retired mathematician, award-winning technical and journalistic writer. 1989 winner of the Bruce B. Howat Award-- an international business-journalism equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize. (Only one Howat was awarded each year, IF the committee in Geneva found an article they really liked. But I don't think the prize is granted anymore.) Also a past author and editorial advisor for Sesame Street... where I regularly worked with Jim Henson and Kermit!
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Agata Urbaniak on 5(+5) Digital-IR Frames from a Roving CoolPix 990 in Paris

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

Great shots all of them but that Des Galeries Lafayette is outstanding!
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

I'm so glad you liked them Agata... and especially the Lafayette! It was an experiment that truly worked out well. Thanks!

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Alan Withington on 5(+5) Digital-IR Frames from a Roving CoolPix 990 in Paris

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

These are great photos, I think there is something special about these early digital cameras. I am seriously tempted to convert one myself. Thanks for the great write up.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

You are so welcome, Alan... So glad you like the images! Though it's somewhat debated, many people credit the "special" color rendition of the early CCD sensors. It certainly stands out here!

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Jim Grey on 5(+5) Digital-IR Frames from a Roving CoolPix 990 in Paris

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

Those are surprisingly good. You're right, the tones give an antique look.
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

Thanks so much Jim! Definitely a look for "classic" architecture.

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Kurt Ingham on 5(+5) Digital-IR Frames from a Roving CoolPix 990 in Paris

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

Wow- the IR somehow makes the whole thing look like a model-the people as well -so they don't seem as intrusive as they might in 'regular color' Very enjoyable, Thanks
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Dave Powell replied:

Comment posted: 14/03/2023

So glad you enjoyed them Kurt. Peoples' clothes also tend to wash out a bit... which helps to minimize their "mass." And I hadn't thought about the "model" aspect before, but the Trocadero shot is certainly a good example!

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