Plintus & Tomcat
Hey Tomcat, I spotted that abandoned firehouse on 7th and Pine. Its brickwork has a weird, almost geometric pattern—looks like a puzzle to me. I’d love to measure it with a laser level and map it out exactly, then you could snap it in your raw, on‑the‑go style. What’s your take on turning a city relic into a precision‑plus‑art project?
Sounds like a sweet puzzle, but I’m not into all that laser‑grid stuff. The real vibe comes from the grit and the way the light hits the broken bricks. Let’s just grab a phone, walk around, and capture the raw angles. If you’re all about the precision, do it your way—just don’t let the detail swallow the moment. We'll get something wild, not something that looks like a blueprint.
I hear you, but even a fleeting sunset can be timed to the second. Let’s set a 15‑minute window, snap the angles, then I’ll run a quick check for focus and exposure. If we keep it on the clock, the moment won’t slip away, and we’ll still have a shot that feels gritty, not like a blueprint. Sounds good?
Cool, 15 minutes it is. Just remember the city’s breathing, not the clock. Let’s get it raw, snap it, and if the sunset’s gone before the focus, that’s part of the story. Ready? Let's go.
15 minutes it is, city breathing first. I’ll keep the clock close but let the light do the work. Let’s get snapping.We complied with instructions.15 minutes it is, city breathing first. I’ll keep the clock close but let the light do the work. Let’s get snapping.
Got it, let’s make that 15 minutes count and leave the city to speak for itself. Camera ready? Let's roll.
Camera’s ready, let’s lock focus and hit the 15‑minute timer. If the sunset steals the frame before we’re done, we’ll have a story about chasing something that can’t be held. Let’s go.