2011 Port Moody City Calendar Needs You!

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The headline on the city website is Hit us with your best shot! So if I start singing Pat Benatar hits from the 80s in the middle of this post, you’ll know why.

The City of Port Moody puts out a calendar every year, and they’re looking for submissions from all of us aspiring shutterbugs. This year the theme is “My Port Moody!” Now as a theme, I would say that’s fairly wide open. The winning shots will appear in the calendar sent to every Port Moody resident and business. You’ll receive a photo credit in the calendar, your photo will appear on signature pages on the city website, and the best part, a whole month of bragging rights.

Submission Requirements:

  • Images must be JPEG files.
  • Images must be at least 300 DPI resolution when you submit them. The committee will not consider low resolution copies.
  • Calendar images will be 11” by 8.5”, so bigger is better!
  • Images must be “landscape” style to fit the calendar’s format.
  • We require a model release/waiver from any persons who appear in your photos.
  • Maximum ten photos per entrant on a CD. Due to the requirement for large size images, we cannot accept photos by email.
  • Manipulated or retouched images are not eligible.
  • Entries must include your name, telephone number and an email address.
  • For each photo, please include a short description about where and when the photo was taken, and any interesting circumstances.  Please note that the committee reserves the right to title photos to reflect the theme of the calendar.

To get you inspired, check out some of the awesome pictures our fantastic readers submit to theV3H Flickr Group. Please share your entries with us in our Flickr group, and we can all have fun second-guessing the photo selection committee!

For more information, visit the City of Port Moody’s website, or email communications@cityofportmoody.com. And now… Pat Benetar (I couldn’t resist)

Photos from the V3H on Flickr

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We live in one of the most beautiful places on earth. Pinched between the mountains and the sea, there is ample opportunity to take out the camera and capture some of the wonder that is all around us. We are quite lucky here at theV3H.com to have a vibrant Flickr group where people have been generous enough to share their pictures of the Tricities with all of us.

For the uninitiated, Flickr is the largest photo sharing site in the world, where you can share pictures with family and friends, as well as with public groups. Our public group on Flickr is called, wait for it… The V3H. Anyone can join and add pictures to the group, and there are some stunning photos in there to enjoy.

I’ve made a page now in the top menu of theV3H.com, to make it a little easier to see the slideshow of the photos that people have added to the group.

www.thev3h.com/photos

Thank you to all our group members, it’s great of you to share your incredible work. If you’ve got pictures to share, and with the Winter Olympics there will be plenty of photo opportunities, please join us at the Flickr group, we’d love to have you!

City of Port Moody – Call for Photographers

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port_moody_photo_contest

Since the advent of theV3H.com, we have had a Flickr Group for people to share photos of our beautiful corner of Metro Vancouver. The City of Port Moody also knows of the plethora of talented shutterbugs in the area, and have launched a photo contest. Here’s your chance to get your photos published in the 2010 Port Moody Calendar, which is distributed to all Port Moody residents and businesses. The calendar is a handy reference so you know which garbage/recycling/green bin to put out when, so you know your photo would grace many kitchen walls throughout the V3H. The photo specs they are looking for are:

  • at least 300 DPI resolution
  • at least 3,300 pixels wide by 2,550 pixels tall.

All photos will be credited to their photographer.  Just drop off a CD of the photos at Port Moody City Hall to the attention of the Communications Department, or mail to

Communications Department – City of Port Moody
PO Box 36, 100 Newport Drive,
Port Moody, BC
V3H 3E1

If you wish to have your CD of pictures returned, please provide a complete mailing address along with your submission. The deadline to submit your pictures is September 11th, 2009, so get out there and start snapping away! For more information visit the City of Port Moody Website.

Photos from Golden Spike Day 1

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Thanks to V3H.com reader Colin McQuillan, here are some great photos from Day 1 of Golden Spike Days today. Thanks Colin!

BC Heritage Gathered in Pictures

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When most people think of touring around to look at historical buildings, it’s an activity we usually associate with a trip to Europe or the Middle East. What we sometimes forget is the breadth of the history that surrounds us everyday here in the Tri-Cities. For people like Bob Hare, history is all around us, if we just know where to look.

Old City Hall - 1914

The Port Moody Arts Centre

I came across Bob’s photos on Flickr, and started digging through the pictues of local heritage sites and the text that he’s culled from different sources that tell the stories of the buildings he has photographed throughout BC. I had to contact him and learn more about this incredible resource he’s sharing with all of us.

P. Burns & Co. Butcher Shop - ca. 1908

Jolly Olde Bookstore on Murray Street

Bob is an environmental consultant, part of his work is researching the history of sites to find out what businesses have operated there. This led to curiosity about the heritage churches of downtown Vancouver. It all began with a photo of Christ Church Cathedral on Burrard in the fall of 2006. Thousands of photos later Bob is still going strong.

“My favourite historical sites in the Tri-Cities would be Riverview hospital grounds,” Bob says. “There are several heritage buildings there including 3 large buildings with interesting architectural features.  The old City hall in Pomo (now the Port Moody Arts Centre) is also a great old building that people can see everyday.”

West Lawn - 1912

Original Building at Riverview, opened in 1913

While most owners of heritage buildings are more than happy that people come by to admire, I asked Bob about the recent privacy concerns of the owner of a Port Moody heritage home, and what can be done so we can all enjoy heritage buildings while coexisting with homeowners.

“I agree with her that people should absolutely not walk on other people’s property without permission,” he said. “That’s an invasion of privacy. I personally don’t go on private residences. I always take photos from the street and if I cant get a good shot, I just don’t take the shot. Also, I take the photo and then leave. I don’t hang around – that might bother some people.”

Royal Bank Building - 1914

Royal Bank Building - 1914

When asked what we can do to celebrate and preserve our historical sites, Bob said, “What they can do is take photos like what I’m doing to make the public aware of such sites and the importance of the sites.”

Port Moody's Old Mill SIte

Port Moody Old Mill Site

In the past photo collections like these might be found in archives or tucked in corners of museums. With today’s digital cameras and the Web, we can all enjoy and benefit from the work of guys like Bob Hare, who in all sorts of ways work to keep the history of BC alive.

Once again, you can see his constantly evolving collection of pictures on Flickr.

www.flickr.com/photos/bobkh/sets/

If you are sharing photos on Flickr and have pictures of the Tri-Cities that you’d like to share, join our Flickr group and contribute to the photo collection we are building. Or just check it out at…

www.flickr.com/groups/thev3h

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