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Through the
Camera Lens: The Dawning of a New Day in Nauvoo
by Scot Facer
Proctor
I never tire
of Nauvoo. Something about the very name seems to excite the DNA.
Capturing Nauvoo on film and digital images has been easy because
long ago Nauvoo captured my heart.
May I bring
you with me on a 'fast stroll' through Nauvoo on the morning of
Thursday, June 27, 2002? I say 'fast' because when I shoot morning
light I know that I only have a few minutes when the light is just
the way I want it for taking images. The clock on the temple will
help us see the changes in light. Let's go down to 'the flats' as
well and show you some charming views of the Nauvoo we have come
to know and love.

This is the
first picture I took on the morning of the dedication: 5:57AM. It
was during the first three minutes of light and I thought, "If
no one captures the light as it first touches the temple spire,
who will ever know what it was like that sacred day?"

We published
this as the cover of "A Compensation for Their Tears."
I love the texture in this photo; it's almost edible. People have
asked me over and over again, "how do we know those star windows
were made of colored glass?" We can look at the gray scales
of those early Daguerreotypes and see that they were colored (the
same basic process is used in the colorization of old black and
white movies).

Here you can
see the light beginning to move down the east façade of the
temple. The color temperature of the light changes very rapidly
in those first few minutes of sunshine. I figure I have about five
minutes at this temperature.

I call this
shot "The sun, the moon and the stars." This beautiful,
enormous window that lets light into the celestial room represents
the sun. The moon represents herself. The star stones grace the
soffit of the temple throughout.

I can stare
at this picture of the temple for hours. There is something so pleasing
about these beautiful sunstones at the top of the thirty pilasters.
They just ring "Nauvoo" in my ears and heart and make
me want to look even longer.
Click
here to go on to Part 2 of
The Dawning of a New Day in Nauvoo.
(All
photographs Copyright 2002 Scot Facer Proctor)
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© 2002 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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