Wikipedia:WikiProject New York City/Wanted photos

This page is for requesting photos of New York City subjects.

Guidelines edit

This is not a list of articles needing photos, but a place for people to make specific, actionable requests to local wikiphotographers. It is not intended to duplicate Category:Wikipedia requested photographs in New York City, which includes residents of New York, historical events, and other subjects which one cannot simply go out and take a picture of. It can also be used to request a better picture (in terms of quality, composition, or being up-to-date) than the one that's currently there.

Please be as specific as possible about the photo you're requesting, including any information you have that may help (e.g. that no tripods are allowed, or that it's on a street closed to the traffic during certain hours).

The section on "photo opportunities" is for time-limited subjects, such as an upcoming event.

Photo requests edit

Special or difficult requests edit

Some requests may be more difficult. If you're looking for a photo of a space that requires special access, like a building interior which isn't typically open to the public, add it here. This section can also include requests for higher quality photos.

Yup, I have seen photos like this. Unfortunately unless it's published in an old enough publication, or has some other clear PD evidence, we can't upload it. ɱ (talk) 17:42, 23 August 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed. But since we know it's from the Transit Museum finding that information is probably tractable. pburka (talk) 20:41, 23 August 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Photo opportunities edit

  • With as much photography of Manhattanhenge is out there, it seems like we should be able to get one good enough for FP. This year the "full" Manhattanhenge is tomorrow night, 7/12 (but weather looks dodgy). — Rhododendrites talk \\ 23:31, 11 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]
  • Tiffany & Co. flagship store would benefit from better and more interior images, especially post-renovation. Will reopen soon. ɱ (talk) 14:29, 17 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Notable graves edit

  • I made a custom Google map with GPS coordinates of 114 notable graves at Green-Wood Cemetery that don't currently have photos. It includes big names such as William S. Hart, Bill the Butcher, Boss Tweed, three Roosevelts, and FAO Schwarz. Nick Number (talk) 16:22, 9 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
    • Nice work @Nick Number: it makes me think you had a list of coordinates. As it happens, when over a mile away from home I generally bring up WikiShootMe on my phone. WSM Green-Wood. The red dots let me find and shoot any nearby sights that have a known location but no photo. For example, earlier this year that's how I got File:Sunset Park High School 2023 jeh.jpg. Yesterday on my way home I stopped in that neighborhood for shopping, but the site showed me no interesting red dots, so my pictures yesterday were in Gowanus and Downtown Brooklyn. As you can see in the blue dots, Wikiphotographers have been busy in the cemetery, making mostly bird pictures but some like File:Rocco Agoglia G-W Cem angel jeh.jpg are gravestones.
    • Seems to me, all those gravesites ought to be in Wikidata so they will show in WikiShootMe and WD App and any other maps that are automatically made from WD. Then, yesterday instead of biking past the main gate of the cemetery, I would have docked the bike and taken a walk inside. Anyway, probably some day later this year I'll pass through the neighborhood again and maybe remember to find your WikiProject NYC post and your custom map. But I go past a lot of places every year. Like, day before yesterday I was hunting and killing red dots in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York and a couple weeks ago in South Philadelphia. Alas, my memory has been slipping since I turned 70, and next year I may forget that a separate map exists just for this cemetery. Jim.henderson (talk) 13:54, 11 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
    • This is great, Nick, thanks. I started to make exactly this a few years ago, but was doing it manually (taking a list of names others had found and cross-referencing the grave lookup and the map, then placing a marker). It was just too much, but I'm glad to see this. Also curious how you did it/where you got the data? I'm at the cemetery relatively often (responsible for a lot of those bird photos), so would be happy to poke away at the list when the weather's not so bad. — Rhododendrites talk \\ 14:07, 11 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
      • @Jim.henderson and Rhododendrites: Thank you. All of the coordinates are from Find a Grave. I can't guarantee that they're 100% correct, but I did at least exclude ones that were obviously wrong (i.e. outside the cemetery). I wasn't familiar with WikiShootMe, but I can see how that would be a useful tool. I can start on adding the coordinates to Wikidata. Nick Number (talk) 16:18, 11 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
      • Ok, added. Nick Number (talk) 19:28, 11 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]
    • Oh. Drat. Good work; it just didn't have the desired effect. I was hoping to see the gravesites in the map, but just putting the "Place of burial" statement in the biographical item doesn't do it. I suppose making a separate WD item for every gravestone would do the job. Perhaps there is some better way to make the gravesite appear on the map. It seems a shortcoming of WD that it does not appear. If we can make it work, it might be a pleasant way to work with Green-Wood, going through every person, organization, or bit of history in Wikipedia that is connected to any particular location, and providing coords and a picture or three. We could also provide links to Find-a-Grave and Historical Marker DataBase and whatever else may be applicable. If we can't find a better way than by giving every notable's gravestone a WD item, then that's the way to go.
    • Oh, and when F-a-G or HMDB gives impossible locations, we can go ahead and map those impossible locations for later correction. Locations in Wikidata are full of errors; sometimes I walk to the red dot in WSM, fail to find the item, and with just a little Web searching on my smartphone figure the right location a few blocks away. For that matter, it happened yesterday. In that case Google Earth sent me to the wrong place for Quarry Park in Hastings, but a Facebook post gave me the right location a mile away. At home that evening, I wrote a Google Maps "review" of the place giving the correct location and made a WD item with that location; we didn't have an item about the park at all. Now, when I zoom in on the correct location, Google Maps says it's Quarry Park, with a park symbol. However, when I ask where Quarry Park is, Google still sends me to the wrong place which also says it's Quarry Park with a park symbol. Too bad Google is less open to repairs by the public than we are. Anyway if our grave sites get on the maps made from WD, we will progress more quickly with our own projects. Jim.henderson (talk) 00:26, 12 September 2023 (UTC)[reply]