A Polaroid Elegy

gull slide, photo by mfophotos

Frequent Michigan in Pictures contributor Mark O’Brien has just published A Polaroid Elegy – My Last Year With A Polaroid Camera. He writes:

This book is really about a journey into the slightly surreal world of Polaroid photography. Not everything you see looks the same after being shot with a Polaroid camera, and this book may give you a better appreciation for the wonderful invention of Edwin Land. The film used to create the photos in this book will no longer be available, hence the title.

Click through to preview and order the book. You can see many Polaroid photos Mark has taken in his Polaroids slideshow (photo set).

No Polaroids you say? Savepolaroid.com (where you can learn more about the history of Polaroid and Edwin Land’s work) notes that on February 8, 2008, Polaroid Corporation announced that it will discontinue production of all instant film. Apparently there is something called PolaPremium that will be revealed in a few days, so all may not be lost. Speculation is rampant.

Hang On To Your Passport | I’m Not Leaving Summer

Hang On To Your Passport | I'm Not Leaving Summer

Hang On To Your Passport | I’m Not Leaving Summer, photo by docksidepress.

If anyone else wants to hang around the terminal before the flight leaves for winter, I’ll be looking at these daisies bigger or over by this flock of herons!

DeVos Place in Grand Rapids

Ode to Grand Rapids

Ode to Grand Rapids, photo by Billy Jack O’Toole.

So I’m going to the 1st annual Grand Rapids International Wine & Food Festival today and wondered what the venue is like. It it cheating for me to turn that into a blog post?

The DeVos Place Convention Center web site says:

The Convention Center features a 162,000 square foot, column free exhibit hall, 40,000 square foot ballroom and 26 individual meeting rooms (32,000 square feet). Twelve spacious loading docks (with a wash bay and marshalling area), allow for easy access into the exhibit hall.

In addition, DeVos Place features a 2,404 seat performing theater with two independent loading docks and one loading ramp. Home to the Grand Rapids Symphony, Grand Rapids Ballet Company, Opera Grand Rapids and Broadway Grand Rapids … part of a vibrant downtown entertainment district featuring over 50 dining establishments, nightclubs, four museums and the 12,000 seat Van Andel Arena, all within walking distance.

You can get an idea of the scale of the facility with their virtual tours and get the nuts and bolts details from Wikipedia’s DeVos Place Convention Center entry. Also check out this Devos Place slideshow and locate Devos Place on Absolute Michigan’s map.

Check out more Grand Rapids photos from Billy Jack!

Port Sanilac might have been Bark Shanty Point

Port Sanilac life preserver

Port Sanilac life preserver, photo by Deep blue ocean.

Be sure to check this baby out bigger (and this one too)!

Wikipedia says that Port Sanilac is a village in Sanilac Township of Sanilac County, pop 658:

This village was originally a lumberjack settlement on the shore of Lake Huron named “Bark Shanty Point.” In the late 1840s and 1850s, the settlement gained its first sawmill, schoolhouse, and general store. In 1854, Bark Shanty Point’s first post office opened. In 1857 the village was renamed to Port Sanilac, as it is in Sanilac Township in Sanilac County. Local legend attributes the name to a Wyandotte Indian Chief named Sanilac.

This photos is from the Port Sanilac Marina (marina web cam). More about the town at the village at Port Sanilac web site.

Madonna in Detroit

Madonna in Detroit

Madonna in Detroit, photo by irinuchka.

Irina was one of many who got to see Madonna’s show at Ford Field in Detroit on November 18, 2008. You can (and should) see this bigger in her Madonna concert slideshow.

You can get much more of Madonna (Madonna Louise Ciccone) on Absolute Michigan and (of course) at Madonna.com.

Shades of Green

Shades of Green

Shades of Green, photo by James Korringa.

1. Counts days since he’s seen sun.
2. Thinks “That many already?”
3. Wonders if this will be the Longest Winter Ever.
4. Blogs something green “just in case”

James says this is from the Bond Falls area, July 2008. See it – and more great shots – bigger in his slideshow.

More from Bond Falls on Michigan in Pictures.

Piquette Plant sunset … or is that a sunrise?

Piquette Plant sunset

Piquette Plant sunset, photo by LindaB..

Yesterday on Absolute Michigan we featured an article from Michigan History Magazine titled Where the Model T began and I found this photo while looking for a picture to pair with it. I decided to find another and feature this one here!

Jerald Mitchell calls the Ford Motor Company’s Piquette Avenue Plant in Detroit “a fulcrum point of human history [where] the balance of history shifted.” It was at this factory in Detroit that Henry Ford and his cohorts conceived the Model T automobile. For nine months, these men labored through fifteen-hour days, scrawled rough diagrams on the blackboards, fiddled with auto parts and patterns, argued and probably repeated the words “what if” a thousand times. When they were done, they had created the design for one of the most revolutionary automobiles ever built.

Read the rest on Absolute Michigan and learn much more about the museum that Jerald and others have created at tplex.org – the Model T Automotive Heritage Complex.

Linda writes she and her husband took a tour of the Ford Model T Piquette plant where restoration is underway. She says that the plant has special meaning for them as her husband’s great great grandfather was the winning bid for the plumbing of the building with a bid of $2,035! She also notes that these are the original windows to the plant.

You can see her other photos from the Piquette Plant, check out these Piquette photos from Miz Jelly Bean and dive into the Piquette slideshow on Flickr.

The Zilwaukee Bridge

The Zilwaukee Bridge

The Zilwaukee Bridge, photo by Mario.Q.

This photo is part of Mario’s Zilwaukee Bridge set (slideshow). He writes:

The Zilwaukee Bridge carries northbound and southbound I-75 125 feet over the Saginaw River at Zilwaukee, MI with a total length of just over 8,000 ft. This high level bridge replaced a drawbridge at the same location that caused major backups on I-75 with frequent openings for ship traffic going from Saginaw, MI to the Great Lakes. With a major and widely publicized construction mishap and huge budget overruns this is one of the more widely know bridges in the State of Michigan.

You can read much more about this star-crossed bridge in Wikipedia’s Zilwaukee Bridge entry, but the best resource is michiganhighways.org. There you can find The Zilwaukee Bridge: From the Beginning by MDOT. This details the whole story including “The Accident“. There’s also a bunch of photos of the bridge including an aerial view and an annotated aerial view.

There used to be blue skies at General Motors…

There used to be blue skies at General Motors...

There used to be blue skies at General Motors…, photo by Derek Farr ( DetroitDerek ).

This photo is part of Derek’s great Detroit set of photos (slideshow). Derek writes:

A view out of General Motors World Headquarters, located in the Rencen Building in Downtown Detroit. There was a time that even thinking of General Motors running out of cash would be laughable … not anymore.

Indeed. This morning I’ve read editorials in the leading papers on both sides of the aisle that show a rising sentiment against the Detroit car companies. In Bailout to Nowhere in the New York Times, David Brooks suggests that it’s a bad idea to try and manage the economic jungle that claimed PanAm, ITT and Montgomery Ward and replaced them with Microsoft, Southwest Airlines and Target.

In the Wall Street Journal Robert Hahn and Peter Passell suggest that we should Stimulate Car Buyers, Not Car Makers:

Since a big fiscal-stimulus package for fighting the recession — some combination of tax cuts, extended unemployment compensation, infrastructure grants and assistance to states — is coming soon, why not stimulate consumers to buy cars? Why not offer eye-popping rebates — say, $3,000 — for a limited time to buyers of cars and light trucks? It would probably make sense to phase out rebates for the most expensive cars, and as a treaty obligation, it wouldn’t do to discriminate against foreign makes.

How much downstream benefit this would generate and for whom is hard to predict. Still, it is a fair bet that most of the money would be quickly recycled in the form of demand for everything from auto parts to car mechanics’ salaries — just what you want to happen in a recession.

What do you think? Are we watching the sunset of the Big Three … and will the sun rise for them and for the Michigan auto industry?

Ercy posted a link to GM Facts & Fiction. It’s by GM, but I think that GM has a part of the story to tell too. Found an interesting column in the Freep through their links by Susan Tompor titled Where’s the love? I never knew Detroit was a dirty word (please go read it). She makes a lot of great points including:

We’re watching one huge disconnect here.

We have the worst financial crisis that most of us have ever seen. Automakers sell big-ticket items that generally require financing. Michigan has been in a recession for years — not just a few months. We are on the edge. And somehow, still, no one here deserves any help.

General Wesley Clark suggests that aiding the American automobile industry is not only an economic imperative, but also a national security imperative in What’s Good for GM is Good for the Army.

What’s the forecast Mr. Wooly Bear?

What’s the forecast Mr. Wooly Bear?, photo by reddeviltj

Wikipedia says that the banded woolly bear caterpillar is the larva of the Isabella tiger moth. As every schoolchild knows, the wooly bear is the Farmer’s Almanac of insect kingdom:

Folklore of the eastern United States holds that the relative amounts of brown and black on the skin of a wooly bear caterpillar (commonly abundant in the fall) are an indication of the severity of the coming winter. It is believed that if a woolly bear caterpillar’s brown stripe is thick, the winter weather will be mild and if the brown stripes are narrow, the winter will be severe. In reality, hatchlings from the same clutch of eggs can display considerable variation in their color distribution, and the brown band tends to grow with age; if there is any truth to the aphorism, it is minimal.

While the wooly bear may not be pushing Al Roker for a job, the wooly bear does produce its own anti-freeze (page also includes some extreme closeups – of the caterpillar, not Roker). If you’re interested in detailed instructions for how to keep wooly bears over the winter, check the Michigan Entomology Society. If you’re interested in simple instructions for how to keep wooly bears with a soundtrack, check here.

This photo is part of Susan’s Bugs set (slideshow).