Maison Nicolas

I was curious about the padlocked wooden box with the words "Maison Nicolas".

I was drawn to the pastel colour of the bicycle and the colour of the tyre. I feel that they reflect the colour of the sand and the sky. I was curious about the padlocked wooden box with Maison Nicolas printed on the side.

Is Maison Nicolas a real place? Is it a house of fashion or something else? If it exists, where is it located? What’s in the box?

A Google search using the keywords "Maison Nicolas" and "Asbury Park" led me to the website of Lush Wines - Beers & Liquors which is located in downtown Asbury Park on the corner of Bond Street and Cookman Avenue. The webpage featured a white wine, Chardonnay Vin De Pays DOC Consensus, from a winery in Bordeaux called Maison Nicolas. I was puzzled at first, and then it hit me. The lettering on the bottle of Chardonnay Vin De Pays DOC Consensus matched the lettering on the box. A quick look at my photograph of the bicycle and my intuition was confirmed. The box on the back of the bike is about the right size for a bottle of wine.

So now I have new questions. Are the bicycle and box and art installation? Are they part of an advertising campaign by the winery, Maison Nicolas? Or are they the personal property of a resident who loves wines?


The image was made during my [Saturday afternoon trip to Asbury Park with Bhavna]. There was a distracting sign to the left and an unattractive boardwalk bench on the right. I went for the square crop to remove these and entered the frame to focus on the bicycle. I had read that the rule of thirds can be ignored for square photographs and that entering the subject makes the picture feel more balanced. I don’t remember where I read this.

As I pushed the shutter, a man and his dog suddenly entered the frame from the left. I quickly dispatched both in Adobe Photoshop using the lasso tool and content-aware fill.

Yellow Door

This small yellow-door kiosk is one of many badge purchase kiosks one sees along the boardwalks in New Jersey.

In New Jersey, you pay to access the beach. I was told that the money is used for beach cleanup. Beach passes can be expensive and have made some beaches in New Jersey inaccessible to some year-round residents and low-income families looking for an inexpensive beach experience.

I want everyone to enjoy the beach ~ Lisa Cramp, Asbury Park resident and Founder of the Asbury Park Community Beach Badge Fund

The Asbury Park Community Beach Badge Fund was established by Lisa Cramp when she noticed a trend in the beach area. While working at a bar on the boardwalk, Lisa noticed that many families would wait until after the beach staff and lifeguards went home for the day. Underprivileged families and teens could enjoy the beach for free but ran the risk of swimming in the ocean without professional supervision. Since 2018, the Asbury Park Community Beach Badge Fund has raised over $36,000 towards badges for Asbury Park residents in need.

I remember the first time I was asked to pay a fee to access the beach in New Jersey. I was appalled. In the West Indies, beaches are public property. You can put up a multi-million dollar house on the beach, but if you fence off the beach, you will be fined, but the citizens have the right to destroy the fence to ensure their right of way.

I can’t even imagine how that would work. Imagine a scenario where you are born on the island. Wealthy westerners buy up all the beaches and fence them off. The only way you, the island-born person, can see the beach is via the tourist brochure. I imagine there would be a revolt.

This small yellow-door kiosk is one of many badge purchase kiosks one sees along the boardwalks in New Jersey.

Light and Shadow in Asbury Park

A few weeks ago, on a late Sunday afternoon in late April, Bhavna and I took a long walk on the Asbury Park boardwalk. I learned that day that Bhavna had only visited Asbury Park once before, and that visit was with Shaan and me. Let me put that into perspective. I am two years older than Bhavna. We’re both immigrants. Since she was six years old, she has lived in New Jersey. Her family emigrated from Gujarat, India. I have lived in various states, including New York, Georgia, and Michigan, since I emigrated from the West Indies in 1986. I moved from Michigan to New Jersey in 1994. In that short time, I have visited more places in New Jersey than Bhavna has since she started living here. It seems her family was not the adventurous type.

We arrived at the Asbury Park Convention Hall around 2 PM. I noted that the sun was on the western side of the boardwalk. I took a lot of photographs that afternoon, photographing whatever appealed to my eye. Later, while looking at the pictures on the Mac Studio, a pattern emerged; people sitting, people walking dogs and bicycles.

24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

Dog ownership must be a thing in Asbury Park. I don’t know why. We saw little dogs and big dogs. Short hair dogs and shaggy-haired dogs. Dogs! One of the local bars, the Wonder Bar, has a yappy hour. The outdoor space was packed with dogs and their owners when we walked by.

24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

The following Saturday, I returned to Asbury Park with a group of photographers. We were students of photographer Freddy Clark for the "Down the Shore" in Asbury Park workshop by Princeton Photo Workshop. We explored subjects on the boardwalk but also around downtown Asbury Park. During the workshop, Freddy provided some history of Asbury Park. I had no specific plan for what I would photograph, but I tried to avoid benches, dogs and bicycles. I failed.

30 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR
Asbury Park Casino
30 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

This week’s Lens-Artist Photo Challenge brings up the topic of light and shadow. I scrolled through some of the photographs from the two Asbury Park trips, looking for examples that worked for this challenge. These images were processed in Adobe Lightroom from the original RAF image. The default (standard) mode on the Fuji X-T3 is PROVIA film simulation, but I prefer CLASSIC CHROME for street photography. I originally intended to post-process these are colour images, but the topic of light and shadow pushed my mind toward choosing to edit in black and white. I switched to the ACROS+G profile in Adobe Lightroom and used that as a base for all the images.

30 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

In this image, I was hoping to photograph this restaurant with two people chatting on the bench for scale and to add a bit of story. The lines and shapes and the shadows had caught my eye. However, as I composed my photograph, a third person sat down. I increased the exposure and shadow sliders in Adobe Lightroom to reduce the shadows around the people. I then used an inverted subject mask to adjust the exposure and shadows to my liking. I then cropped out a distracting trash can on the right and reduced some of the sky's dead space.

24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

I like how the shadow on the boardwalk leads the eye toward the back of the image. I like the contrast between the bright clothing of the children playing and the darker clothing of the two people walking toward the camera. This was processed similarly to the one above. I cropped in from the right. This one does not follow the rule of thirds.

24 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR

I love the look of joy on her face. She’s looking down, almost as though she is chasing her shadow.

30 April, 2022 | FujiFilm X-T3 | XF27mmF2.8 R WR