Amy Hassinger

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SoHo, NYC

SoHo
November 09, 2013 by Amy Hassinger in Streets

SoHo is home to the world’s greatest collection of cast-iron architecture. But more than that, SoHo is unique among New York’s neighborhoods for its classical French and Italian architectural designs. It simply doesn’t look like anywhere else, not even the neighboring West Village or Lower East Side. 

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For one thing, the colors are much more distinct in SoHo. They’re brighter. Perhaps that’s a reflection on the people living here. But for many of the cast-iron buiildings that give SoHo it’s unmistakable character, the reason for their bright coloring is actually pretty obvious: whenever you construct anything from wrought iron, it’s going to look like, well, wrought iron.

So the colors of SoHo as they’re known, or at least as they ought to be known, the colors that are just a street photographers dream come true (where else can you find so many amazing backdrops?), are actually the result of many, many coats of bright paints. And they light up a photo in ways even a flash cannot.

November 09, 2013 /Amy Hassinger
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About Amy Hassinger

Amy Hassinger is the author of three novels: Nina: Adolescence, The Priest's Madonna, and After the Dam. Her writing has been translated into Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Russian, and Indonesian and has won awards from Creative Nonfiction, Publisher’s Weekly, the Independent Publisher Book Awards (IPPY), and the Illinois Arts Council. Her non-fiction has appeared in venues such as The New York Times, Creative Nonfiction, Catapult, The Normal School, and The Los Angeles Review of Books. She earned her M.F.A. from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, has received fellowships from the Ucross and Ragdale Foundations, and teaches creative writing at the University of Illinois.