This is a vintage NYC parking sign from the late 1950s or early ’60s…Not the type of sign I collect, but photographed amongst the overgrowth of deep Queens, I think it’s mildly interesting…
© Matt Weber
This is a vintage NYC parking sign from the late 1950s or early ’60s…Not the type of sign I collect, but photographed amongst the overgrowth of deep Queens, I think it’s mildly interesting…
© Matt Weber

© Matt Weber
Hey, this picture might work well on the cover of an LP but CD’s have replaced them years ago. Wait a minute, MP3s are the, no make that MP4s are the format…Maybe I could crop the image a little more from each side and put it on the cover of a book, but Amazon has changed the game with their Kindle, and books are suddenly selling less than their digital counterparts. I guess I could reformat it for the I-Pad, but how long do you think that will be the rage?
How about an “Archival Pigment Print” created by a master of the art of Zhee-Clay printing?
Street Photography © Matt Weber
You may wonder how rare a “Coffee Stain Human” is and the answer is, very rare. In twenty five years I’ve only encountered four of them. Do they matter? Do Siskind’s paint splotches matter? Try finding human coffee stains. This one may be the best of all, as he’s a struggling poet, with a cup of coffee in one hand, and his trusty #2 pencil in the other. He’s frantically scribbling haiku before the next rain comes and washes him away…
Street Photography © Matt Weber
Anyone who lived in New York back in the 1980s remembers this giant painting of “The Doctor”. Yes, the ’80s were a time when the Mets ruled New York. Many younger fans jumped aboard and I can’t blame them. The Yankees were suffering from Steinbrenner’s miserly years, when he colluded with other owners and tried to halt the giving out of huge contracts, which of course was his doing in the first place. Meanwhile the Mets had the two best young players in the game…Darryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden. As a Yankee fan I had to concede that the Mets were better. This trivial nonsense matters little to most people, but to diehard baseball fans, it was torture! I think Kevin Walsh of Forgotten New York will appreciate this photograph or at least I hope so. The Wilpon /Madoff fiasco is making it rather hard to be a Met fan these days. Maybe the young stockbroker who bought into the Mets will turn out to be their knight in shining armor…
Street Photography © Matt Weber
© Matt Weber
There’s a gigantic book available on the History of Hip Hop. The gatefold is a beautiful painting by Mike Thompson and as you can see, a photo I took of Lady Pink was a model. I am happy to have my pictures used in this coffee table book. The book is called Hip Hop a Cultural Odyssey and it is huge and printed on the heaviest paper I’ve ever seen used. This is probably the most comprehensive book on Hip Hop ever published and I’m recommending it highly!
All Photos © Matt Weber
© Matt Weber
I am now able to offer 16×20 “Archival Pigment Prints” of my “Street Photography” for only $175.00
“Silver Gelatin” darkroom prints are also available for many images. Thanks!
All Photos © Matt Weber
I am now able to offer 16×20 “Archival Pigment Prints” of my “Street Photography” for only $175.00 “Silver Gelatin” darkroom prints are also available for many images. Thanks!
© Matt Weber
When I spent an afternoon at Coney Island in 1988, I found several of these nineteenth century fire hydrants still hanging around. They were dated 1898 and may have been the same type which were used to try and put out the famous Luna Park fire in 1944…
All Photos © Matt Weber
As I scour my old negatives looking for a few good men, I found this fellow. Back in the ’80s I would only print the “exciting” pictures and an image like this would never have interested me. I’m happy to find it now, but almost surprised that I took this picture in the first place…
All Photos © Matt Weber
© Matt Weber
I’ve always had a bad habit of taking pictures of people posing for other photographers. This is one of the few times it may have paid off…
I found a different version of this picture while going through my older negatives. I had previously preferred the vertical version…
All Photos © Matt Weber
My book “The Urban Prisoner” is now available on AMAZON for just $40!
You can see the Nathan’s on West 43d St. which had the venerable Times Square Bowling Alley upstairs. I bowled there a few times for 75¢ a game back in the late 1970s. Nathan’s french fries as we all know are just dripping in their grease which may be days if not weeks old. The Big Apple Porn theater would let you stay all day for $2.99 or as long as four flicks lasted…Who is this photographer? I don’t think it’s Eli Reed. Could it be Chester Higgins? I think he has one of those Quantum battery packs on his belt, which leads me to believe he was a press photographer…Oh well, he’s old school and was working the area at its seediest…
All Photos © Matt Weber
My book “The Urban Prisoner” is now available on AMAZON for just $40!
I am now able to offer 16×20 “Archival Pigment Prints” of most images for only $175.00 “Silver Gelatin” darkroom prints are also available for some images. Thanks!
© Matt Weber
All Photos © Matt Weber
I am now able to offer 16×20 “Archival Pigment Prints” of most images for only $175.00 “Silver Gelatin” darkroom prints are also available for some images. Thanks!