Monthly Archives: September 2013

But only three triangles

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It’s been noted that I have a very slight tendency to photograph rectangles, so I want to go on record right now to point out that while this shot does contain an estimated 158* rectangles, it also includes three triangles.

Santa Rosa, New Mexico
photographed 5.4.2013

*158 is a very rough estimate. If anyone wants to actually count the rectangles and provide a more accurate number that would be fine with me. I won’t even make you show your work.

Lines. And lines.

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Sometimes I like to look (literally) at the big picture.

But, when I can get close and see things like this conglomeration of lines, the big-picture view becomes inadequate.

Ritz Theater
Snyder, Texas

photographed 7.10.2013

To be sold eventually to strangers, 3

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My parents were good at keeping things, but really bad at keeping things organized.

My blue footlocker, that I took to Girl Scout camp, was in the garage storeroom, which also had old camping equipment and a case of motor oil and some tools. And dust. Plenty of it, making a thick coat on everything.

The very first thing I saw when I opened the trunk was this doll, whose head had somehow become detached from the rest of her. I remember this doll – it’s a Madame Alexander doll, and it was for Looking At, not Playing With. She was well-dressed, with that fetching off-the-shoulder dress, trimmed with a velvet ribbon. She has stockings, too, and a lace petticoat, and fancy panties. (In all categories, she’s better dressed than I am.)

I don’t know why this doll was saved. None of our other toys were anywhere around.

I had a Barbie and a Ken. My sister had Midge and Skipper (Barbie’s often-overlooked little sister). My best friend down the street (also named Melinda!) had a Barbie with a large wardrobe of store-bought clothes. At our house, though, our mom made Barbie clothes from Barbie-specific patterns, with scraps from her other sewing projects. I wished my Barbie had a fancy wardrobe – specifically the strapless evening dress in silver lame with a mermaid hem made from tulle and matching plastic high-heeled mules. But my doll wore dresses with set-in sleeves, tiny swing jackets, or cotton sheaths in fabrics that matched the clothes my mom wore.

We didn’t find Barbie, or her extended family, when we cleaned out the house. No hand-made clothes, no patterns. That was a little bit of a disappointment: I wanted to look at those tiny pattern pieces with the holes from the pins that would have been used to secure them to the fabric.

Our parents were remarkably (and surprisingly) progressive when it came to our toys. Sure, we had Barbies. But we also had building blocks, made from corrugated cardboard printed to look like red bricks. And a woodburning set (which one of my boy cousins used to burn a tiny line in the wood floor in my bedroom, and which I never mentioned to anyone until now). And cars and trucks. And books. And a sandbox in the yard.

But back to the footlocker. It held a eclectic mix of things that will be headed to the estate sale. Like the doll and her head. Old pictures of people I don’t recognize. (Oddly enough notes that say “Mama” or “summer” on the backs of photos are not all that helpful.) A white baby dress with pink smocking. A box of pocket watch chains. And the thing is none of this stuff has any meaning to me. There’s no way to know why it was important enough to be kept, or who it belonged to, or why I ought to care. And so it seems like the right thing is to let it go. And hope I don’t regret not keeping any of it.

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 8.23.2013

The end was near?

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I don’t know – maybe it’s just me, but the sight of the street-side prophet wearing a safety vest struck me as quite an entertaining sight.

adjacent to Cambridge University
Cambridge, UK

photographed 10.2007

Surf fisher

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It may have been a while since I’ve mentioned how much I like to go to San Francisco, so maybe it’s time to bring that topic up again!

On my most recent trip, two years ago, we stayed near Union Square. One morning, we caught the bus over to the coast, and hiked the Lands End trail. The day was cool and misty, and the low clouds completely obscured the (I assume) fantastic views of the Golden Gate Bridge. But it really didn’t matter, as the views down to the ocean were pretty good on their own. We went as far as the ruins of the Sutro Baths, which was crowded with people climbing all over the (somewhat smelly)(and slippery) ruins.

And, that’s where I saw the surf fisher. I don’t know if he caught anything: I was more than a little mesmerized watching the lacy patterns in the waves.

San Francisco, California
photographed 8.27.2013