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5 posts tagged ASIA
5 posts tagged ASIA
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Tokyo - Cherry Blossoms + Plum Blossoms + Skyline Views in a VIDEO!
My second travel vlog from Tokyo is now up for your viewing pleasure :)
In there is footage of the beautiful Hama-rikyu Gardens (浜離宮恩賜庭園, Hama-rikyū Onshi Teien) on a rainy spring day. I was lucky enough to catch the very first plum blossoms and cherry blossoms of the year.
There is also footage taken while riding a boat that goes along Tokyo’s Sumida River. The Sumida river is a great vantage point to view part of Tokyo’s skyline.
(The odd shape on the building is supposed to be beer foam - the building is the Asahi Beer Hall and it is designed by Philippe Starck)
This will be a series. Next in the series: Ginza and possibly Tokyo’s Memory Lane (big thanks to Sony for having me as a guest for this adventure!!) …
I am traveling to Paris in a few days so the next Tokyo video won’t be until I get back. Also, I will be filming in Paris too :).
Because I have the attention span of a gnat and thus know the struggle is real, I will link to the video again (even though it’s above). Here you go:
Hope you enjoy!—-
P.S. - Are any of you on ? It’s a live-streaming app. I have been spontaneously taking people around NYC with me every day. I am Vivienne Gucwa on there (or search for travelinglens). Fun, fun!
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My best-selling released in stores/online worldwide recently. Info about the book (including many photos, sample pages, and info about my history and style of photography):
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Tokyo
Blade Runner edition.
🚀 🌃
Taken with my Sony A7S and edited on my phone with …
Used the Priime styles: Bushwick + Nice + Streets + Shadowline
✨
😍
Check out my room tour of my room at the Lost in Translation Hotel + video of the the Tokyo subway and beautiful Tokyo in the rain… :)
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Tokyo - The Lost in Translation Hotel + Tokyo Subway and Shinjuku in a VIDEO!
My first ever travel vlog and it’s part of an ongoing series.
All Tokyo!
:)
In the video above, there is a room tour of my room at the Park Hyatt Tokyo in Shinjuku, the incredible views from my room window (had a view of Mt. Fuji!)…… some footage of Tokyo in the rain since it was raining the first day that we arrived in Tokyo…
and my first experience with the Tokyo subway :).
This will be a series. Next in the series: cherry blossoms in Tokyo..
…beautiful skyline views of the city from a boat on the river there, shabu-shabu, a tea ceremony and other fun stuff.
I am traveling to California this week so I should have Part 2 up in a week or so and then I will have the other parts up (including a TON of video about Japanese snacks and food!) much quicker!!Because I have the attention span of a gnat and thus know the struggle is real, I will link to the video again (even though it’s above). Here you go:
Hope you enjoy!—-
My best-selling released in stores/online worldwide recently. Info about the book (including many photos, sample pages, and info about my history and style of photography):
View: , , My Travel Blog, On G+,
(My photo-set from one of the coolest alleys I have visited in Tokyo…)
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Tokyo - Piss Alley - Memory Lane - Shinjuku - Japan
Tokyo is a city that excels in transporting you from the present right into the glowing heart of the future.
Most of its buildings are towering monuments of modernity constructed at what seems like a break-neck pace to house its ever-growing population.And yet, if you search really hard, you can still find (slightly) hidden passages that reveal the Tokyo that rests in largely in the city’s memory.
Nestled amongst the buildings of East Tokyo in Shinjuku is a series of alleys …
…known by the names Piss Alley (小便横丁), Memory Lane (Omoide Yokocho (思い出横丁), or (more commonly) Yakitori Alley.
My Blade Runner adoring heart could barely contain itself when I first turned the corner and entered this incredible area of Shinjuku.
The name Piss Alley is a reference to a time in its history when it (allegedly) was a popular spot for the shadier element to drink quite a bit. The urban legend (one of many) is that because it was such a popular drinking spot, people would relieve themselves in the alley itself. And so it was coined Piss Alley
In truth, you are not likely to find people relieving themselves in the alley in its present incarnation.
But names seem to stick - especially names that conjure up colorful narratives.What you will find are a fair amount of bars…
And plenty of yakitori stalls which intimately seat only a few people at a time…
If you are going to visit Tokyo, I highly recommend visiting during cherry blossom season.
Nothing is more beautiful than seeing one of the largest cities in the world decked out in sakura blossoms…
Alleys in large metropolises with colorful pasts,
I love you.
Forever,V.
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P.S. These are best viewed large. Click/tap each one to view larger at this link here:
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Taken last week in Tokyo where I was a guest of Sony (big thanks!).
Can’t wait to eventually show you all the video footage I have of this location too. My first Tokyo video is going up early next week most likely on . Excited!—-
My best-selling released in stores/online worldwide recently. Info about the book (including many photos, sample pages, and info about my history and style of photography):
View: , , My Travel Blog, On G+,
:
Tokyo Skyline
Mount Fuji
coils across the landscape;
a frozen, sleeping dragon
dreaming the
day into night
as the sun descends
like a fiery ember
on the exhaled breath
of the slumbering giant
and dusk
extinguishes the sunset.
Shadows dance
across Tokyo
when the sun slips away
for the night
as the present
pulses into the future;
arteries pumping
and flowing through
city streets like
sanguine lava.
And as the
city’s synaptic
skyscrapers
reach up to
the night sky,
Tokyo dreams
itself into
existence.
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Taken last week in Tokyo.
Big thanks to the hotel from Lost in Translation (the in Shinjuku) who generously hosted me as a guest in Japan for the week and from whose windows I was able to take these photographs (more about that in an upcoming video - most of these were taken from my room).
And a huge thanks to Sony for taking me to Tokyo as their guest and for one of the best travel experiences of my life so far.
I talk a bit about it in two recent videos I put up over on my YouTube channel if you are curious: and
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My best-selling released in stores/online worldwide recently. Info about the book (including many photos, sample pages, and info about my history and style of photography):