Hay,
Today I will show you a great place. For a long time there was a plan to go to this location and do photography. The place is somewhat restricted. But I was able to go very easily. It is an abandoned car park. This place is under the control of Dhaka's Shahbag police station. Late afternoon, early afternoon is the best time for photography in these locations. Adequate lighting is available.
So anyway, I left for the desired location, but was a bit late due to the traffic jam in Dhaka city. On reaching the location, I first met a brother of the police. I asked my brother for permission. I could do without taking permission. Still, I took the permit so as not to get into any trouble. Then I went to that place. This place is amazing.
Abandoned car parking areas can make an interesting and unique location for photography, yielding some great images. It is the perfect location especially for those who are interested in urban exploration and capturing the beauty of decay. Dhaka's Shahbagh offers many such locations, its abandoned car parks a popular choice for photographers to capture the ghostly and eerie atmosphere of forgotten structures, though few people have photographed here so far. These locations can provide interesting backdrops for fashion shoots, portraits and conceptual art, adding a sense of texture and depth to rusted cars and crumbling wall paintings. However, it is important to approach such locations with caution, as they can be unsafe and potentially dangerous, so be very careful with these locations.
For photographers, however, it's a treasure trove of visual opportunities. Rusty cars, broken concrete and overgrown vegetation provide an interesting contrast between past and present, which is part of the subject matter of photography. Peeling paint on walls, cracked concrete and abandoned objects all speak of the transience of life over time.
Photographers who visit this location can use their lenses to capture the essence of this contrast and decay. I didn't capture any contrast in the camera though. Concrete textures, rusted metal and peeling paint create a unique visual experience. The natural light that filters through the cracks in the walls and illuminates the abandoned objects is something that I feel cannot be recreated in a studio.
But it's not just the aesthetics that make this location so appealing. It's also the sense of mystery and the stories hidden in abandoned objects, there are countless stories in these abandoned places. Who owns the cars that are now rusting? What was their last journey? What story does the graffiti on the wall tell? These are questions photographers can explore and try to answer through their images.
One of the cool things here is the graffiti. Someone put some simple graffiti on these abandoned cars. I understood that these graffiti artists were not professionals.
Weeds grow on these old abandoned cars. Mechanical cars are being swallowed by nature. I clicked some pictures and came out.
That's all for today, thanks for your time. Good Bye