Just a couple of quick pictures of how some of the really tall buildings celebrate “the holiday season”.
Here’s a couple of pictures from in front of Fox Studios.
And here’s from in front of Chase Bank.
-H
I keep pointing out that everyplace that’s wide and open (at least in NYC terms) becomes filled with kiosks for the Christmas season. Just inside Grand Central Station (or Terminal) is Vanderbilt Hall. It’s big, it’s open; and right now it is filled with open-air kiosks selling Christmas gifts and stuff.
And, yes, it is jammed with people.
Unlike a lot of these sorts of places, I’ve actually bought stuff here. They seem to have some of the higher quality goods and I like the ambiance.
-H
I went out a recent evening to take some pictures of the Lord and Taylor Christmas windows.
The big sort of lighting of the outside is typically done by the better downtown stores.
Even before I got there, I knew I wouldn’t be taking very good pictures of the windows. Instead, I got the crowds.
And they were impenetrable for me.
Lord and Taylor is on Fifth Avenue around 38th Street. Just a few blocks north of the Empire State Building.
-H
Just a quick finish to my Grand Central Station / Terminal light show review…
The people on the Grand Concourse never really stopped, but they did slow down…a little. There were a number of us lining the walls or just standing in the open. I was standing near the foot of the west stairs, trying to keep out of people’s way while getting a nice view.
Other than the music, what I show here can’t really capture the event. The pictures move pretty quickly across the walls and then there are occasional pauses where you wonder “is it over?”.
Unfortunately, with the lighting, it took my camera a little too long to take the pictures, hence the shakiness.
More kaleidoscope-type pictures.
The back walls of the concourse were also part of the show.
And then a little bit of simulated fireworks…
And the curtain comes down…
From beginning to end: eight minutes.
It’s a nice show.
-H
Every year, Grand Central has a short light show in the Grand Concourse. They try to make the show as big and as grand as the place is. The first year I saw it, it was a laser light show of some sort that really played on the ceiling. For the past couple of years, the light show has become exponentially larger with the main show occuring on the walls of the station. And those are big, big walls.
Recently, I went to the show during rush hour just to see it in the midst of crowds. Here’s the view just as I entered the Grand Concourse from Vanderbilt Hall.
I positioned myself at the west end of the concourse and waited. Here’s a picture of the walls. You might see that they are reddish. That’s part of the show. The red is a “curtain”.
The first sign of the show is a brief light show in the ceiling. Just moving stars.
And the curtain rises…
And then the walls light up.
I haven’t mentioned the music. Yes, there’s music. It’s all instrumental snippits from a variety of music sources. The only one I remember recognizing is part of the Nutcracker Suite. Some of it was just abysmal, but it’s just a form of background more than anything else.
You might notice that it isn’t a true kaleidoscope as the pictures aren’t broken up into different reflections. Last year, it was; but this year they seemed to prefer large pictures projected on the walls.
Some weren’t as clear as others, but they mostly did not constitute a kaleidoscope view.
The ceiling was usually included in the presentation, but I don’t remember if it ever really reflected what was happening on the walls. The pictures below if about as close to a kaleidoscope as any I ever saw.
But the below is a little more typical of the show.
More in the next post.
-H