neadods: (sherdoc)
[personal profile] neadods
After the Holmes exhibit, we split up. L stayed with her friends, and The Other M, while M and C and I left with Jean and Fake Keith of Staggering Stories to meet up with Keith, AsdaMan, and El Presidente of Staggering Stories. (Only Jean is a London native, so the Staggering Storytellers were taking the opportunity to do a little in-country tourism.)

I had no idea until I got there the impact and the sheer size of the installation, which is flooding all around the Tower, lapping and pouring and advancing in waves.

I also had no idea, until we turned the corner and saw the line of volunteers (200 per shift) that the poppies were being assembled, not just being taken out of a box and stuck in the ground. Someone -- usually in military uniform, the Tower is, after all, still a military base(ish) and a historical site -- hammered in a stalk. Then a volunteer in red would gently place the petals on the stem and screw them down with the center of the flower.

The last third of my photo album is a wash of red. It's really impossible to show the impact, much less the size of it, in 600 x 600 pixels. Here in America, we keep seeing the same two photos: poppies waterfalling from the "Weeping Window" and heading to the Thames, and the Queen and Duke wandering among them. Like St. Mary's, I kept trying to get the right "emotion" shot.


Photos in America only show the right side of this.
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Trying to get the scale of it. My mind refuses to grasp that every flower is a life; there are too many.
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The line of volunteers
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Jean had a professional camera and isolated this volunteer. Scott put video of the poppy assembly on my Facebook.
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This is my best shot, I think. It was the end of shift and one of the volunteers stopped to... get a photo? Pray? Couldn't tell from the distance.
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From the sublime to the ridiculous. Staggering Stories and Friends at the Tower.
P1010460

Date: 2014-10-26 02:58 am (UTC)
nonelvis: (Default)
From: [personal profile] nonelvis
The poppies were truly stunning, and I'm so glad I got to see them in person in August. I completely agree that it's just about impossible to wrap your head around the fact that each one of them represents someone who died in the war; there are just so many of them.

These two photos of mine show what the moat looked like in mid-August: left half & right half. You can see how much space they filled in only two months. It's amazing.

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