• ABOUT
  • GANG
  • FACES
  • STAFF
  • ProgressivE-zine
  • Books–PPH
  • Books SERIES
  • SHOP
  • Out Of Bounds – OOB
  • Fake World
  • NOTES From the Streets
  • PROTESTS in the World
    • 2025
    • 2024
  • FEATURED photographers
    • PHOTOS OF THE WEEK
    • PROGRESSIVE COVERS
    • STORY TIME
    • CHALLENGES
    • MATCHING MOMENTS
    • GALLERIES PDFS
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibition
    • Exhibitions
    • Stations ... and stations ... and stations
  • Tips
  • Video
  • Index SEARCH
  • Contact
  • SPOKESPERSONS
  • ProgresFestival MAGAZINE

Progressive Street

  • ABOUT
  • GANG
  • FACES
  • STAFF
  • ProgressivE-zine
  • Books–PPH
  • Books SERIES
  • SHOP
  • Out Of Bounds – OOB
  • Fake World
  • NOTES From the Streets
  • PROTESTS in the World
    • 2025
    • 2024
  • FEATURED photographers
    • PHOTOS OF THE WEEK
    • PROGRESSIVE COVERS
    • STORY TIME
    • CHALLENGES
    • MATCHING MOMENTS
    • GALLERIES PDFS
  • Exhibitions
    • Exhibition
    • Exhibitions
    • Stations ... and stations ... and stations
  • Tips
  • Video
  • Index SEARCH
  • Contact
  • SPOKESPERSONS
  • ProgresFestival MAGAZINE

Montreal in winter by Charles Lafrance

DSC_1158.jpg


Colder Than A Witch’s Tit: Montreal in winter

by Charles Lafrance

 

Early Sunday morning a few weeks ago, I set out to shoot my favorite part of town: the famous south-side, simply know as “Old Montreal.”

The weather forecast that day was not very promising: an extreme blizzard with gusts of wind up to 90km/hr and a temperature of -34C. 

You can make no claim about the Montreal experience, if you have not been through one of our winters. 

The weather is brutally cold - yet beautiful at the same time.

I hoped to capture both conditions that day. As I arrived on location, the situation kept getting worse. I knew this would be a very rugged experience.

In any other setting, my aim as a street photographer would be to put my subject up front and maybe worry about composition. But the primary subject on that day was the storm and the city and then people. And yet hardly anyone was around that morning. 

That day, I brought both my FujiX100F and my Nikon with some wide-angle lenses in hopes of showcasing the immensity of the architecture. 

There are always cars everywhere in this part of Montreal - but, and on that day, there were hardly any. 

Even though I had my X100F in my coat pocket, the shear force of the Artic wind resulted in snow on the viewfinder. 

Although I managed to get this cleaned up, after a while I gave up and just aimed the camera as much as possible. 

Soon both my cameras were frozen solid. I found a place to drink coffee and warm up. It took almost an hour for my gear to thaw and, by the time I returned outdoors, snow removal trucks were everywhere and people were out and about.

So much for the decisive moment, the magic was gone.

All photos from that cold, cold day were all taken in 75-minutes.

Charles Lafrance

DSC_0562 (1).jpg
View fullsize DSC_0979.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1043.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1080 (1).jpg
View fullsize DSC_0899.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1100.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1181 (4).jpg
DSC_1259 (1).jpg
DSC_0727.jpg
DSC_1341.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1265.jpg
View fullsize DSC_1271 (1).jpg
DSC_0939.jpg
Sunday 02.03.19
Posted by Progressive-Street
Newer / Older
Subscribe to newsletter