30.7.12

"Setting theek nahi hua, kya?"


Funny story.

I set myself up at the other side of this road to try and capture this mechanic sort of shop with the traffic going in front of me. I want to get a blurry effect of the moving traffic so I deliberately set my shutter speed to 1/10sec and I kind of liked what I ended up with. 

Of course I attracted a whole lot of attention in the process and the fellows were real curious about why I was photographing them. One of the older men asked to see the picture and when I showed him the results on the display, he silently observed and then looked up at me and very kindly asked, "setting theek nahi hua, kya?" (you didn't manage to get the right setting?)

Haha! I tried to explain that I was going for the blurriness so I set it up like that. I don't think he bought it.

*sigh*


25.7.12

Archives.

What can I say? This just warms my heart. Two of my BFFs at another BFF's wedding back in December... Actually I think this picture was taken on the 1st day of January... the day AFTER the wedding!


17.7.12

Featured: ESPN Cricinfo

A couple of weeks ago, I got this assignment from Cricinfo to show 'How The City Plays Cricket". In India we are obsessed with Cricket; not only do we love to watch the pros play, we also love to play our own game be it on a playground, the street, a basketball court, in the house... wherever we can find space really! So my friends of Anu, Sharan and I set off on a quest to look for cricket and this is what we found.

Featured by ESPN Cricinfo, July 2012

You can see the complete feature HERE. Or Click on the image below!


Composting is Cool.


Have been wanting to start composting for a while now but many excuses got in the way. My parents and I drove to Daily Dump in Indiranagar yesterday and bought ourselves the Mota Lota which is an 3-tiered composter for kitchen waste. It blends in nicely in our garden and it came with a handbook that teaches you all you need to know about successful composting. I love it! Now I don't have to be haunted by the thought of our garbage rotting in some landfill and polluting the air. The composter is like a pet, you have feed it everyday and take care of it. Everytime I put food-scraps in the bin, I think, "more food for the composter!" 
Just call me 'Captain Planet!'

Find out how you can embrace Daily Dump's no-fuss method of composting: www.dailydump.org

And here's a thought for you:

16.7.12

Horse & Rider Screening at BMP 20.

On Saturday we had the wonderful opportunity of hosting a screening of Horse & Rider: A Journey Towards Freedom which is a feature documentary film that I acted as Production Assistant for. The film is a non-conventional look into an industry that is growing at exponential rates: selling and buying minors for sex (read more about it here.)

Sometime last week I had the idea to host a screening and invite some of the awesome people that I have met in Bangalore after I re-located here. There were five different countries represented in our living room last night (Panama, USA, Canada, Australia and India) which I thought was really cool! It was also great to have all these friends that I met in completely different contexts and circumstances meet each other. It's exactly the sort of thing that I used to dread as a little kid when we'd have a big birthday party - all my friends who don't know each other having to hang out with each other and me being the middle person! It caused me a lot of stress. I am happy to discover that adults are much better at this and I didn't have to really play the role of a middle-person and everyone got along marvelously. Haha.


My very own copy of the film just arrived last week.
Order your own at www.horseandriderfilm.com
Anyway I digress; Robert and Carlos were also here. They are friends from Bombay (well, Carlos is from Panama but has been living and working in Bombay for the past three months) They arrived in the morning with the projector and white cloth (which would act as the screen) and we soon got to work setting up the living room for the screening. Carlos is also a photographer and so he set up a time-lapse and recorded this transformation. The resulting video was quite hilarious, or atleast we thought so!

The guests arrived between 6-6:45pm and we started the film around 7pm and then after the film was over, I tried to answer any questions that anyone had and we had a pretty good discussion about the film and the issue of sex-trafficking in India at large and what we can do about it.

We then had dinner (prepared by my genius mother and with contributions from friends) and 'mingled'. According to Robert, no party is complete without a cake so he and Carlos had gone out and bought a cake that afternoon complete with the translation of 'Horse & Rider' inscribed on the cake in Bengali.

After all the guests left, Robert and Carlos set up some 'Light-Art' in our garden which was quite amusing and you can read about that here.

By the end of the night, I was pretty exhausted but also beyond awed and grateful for a... humbling evening. Humbling for many reasons:

1. The film. Everytime I watch it, I fall in love with it a little bit more. I think because I was there when a lot of the shooting for the film happened, it was hard to look at it more objectively and really understand the message of the film. So when I watched it again yesterday, it was a brand new experience even for me and I loved it. I love how sensitively the story is told and though it is a serious and heavy topic, you are not left void of hope by the end of it. I love how the film emphasizes the preciousness of each individual's life. They are unique and fearfully and wonderfully made and that is not to be forgotten.

2. The fact that I got to be a part of such a brilliant film.

3. My parents, who graciously opened up our home to these people who are virtually strangers to them and of course for allowing us to completely rearrange our beautiful living room!

4. My mum especially because she is one of my greatest examples of "practising hospitality". I hope I can be like her when I (really) grow up.

5. Every single person that came to the screening (and even those who couldn't make it). When I moved to Bangalore last November, it was pretty rough. Nothing was as (I thought) it was supposed to be and I was at a bit of a loss. I never really liked Bangalore except for the fact that our house is the closest thing to 'home' for me but I didn't have many friends (close to none, in fact!) and I didn't know where I supposed to 'go' to make these friends! Turns out I didn't have to 'go' anywhere. Each of these friendships blossomed in ways that I could never have imagined for myself and I am humbled by that. 

Interested in hosting a screening yourself? Get in touch: horseandriderfilm@gmail.com and DO IT! You will be blessed.

Poor Kannadiga lady at Sweet Chariot baffled by this strange request to
write in Bengali!
The set-up complete with a large screen and surround sound
"Osho O Oshohari" I think...
Naina and I cutting the cake
The whole gang! (Minus Antu; she had to leave early)

5.7.12

Banganga

An ancient water tank in Malabar Hill. Ban = arrow. Ganga = Ganges river. Legend has it that it came to be when the exiled Ram was came to stop here on his search for Sita. Laxman shot an arrow into the ground and water gushed from the ground to creating a tributary of the Ganga. This is my humble attempt to document Banganga. What struck me first about this place were all the ducks and geese! Bombay is full of surprises.























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