Blog Archives

The beast on the wall

011214

Maybe this is one of those times when there’s nothing I can say that will add anything to the photo….

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 9.29.2012

Car repair (not) done here

010814

Maybe you recognize this from an earlier post? Thanks to an open door at the back of the place, I was able to step inside and look around. The best thing I saw was this view from one of the service bays, with the garage door windows providing a frame to both the inside and the outside.

I don’t know how long the building’s been vacant – the business has moved to a new location – but it is for sale. The building is 1,556 square feet, and is in need of some renovation. For one thing, the restroom adjacent to the office doesn’t have a sink in it. It’s not that vandals have taken the sink. It’s never had one. Why was THAT a good idea?

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 12.24.2013

It all blends together, eventually

010714

This was a nice find as we drove through Seymour. At least I thought so; the nearby dog took exception to my being there and barked non-stop.

This is the back wall of a long-abandoned gas station, the old-time kind with a service bay. What caught my eye here was the way that all the different things – stucco wall, electric meter, weeds – have started to take on the same sort of texture, blending their colors together in a shade we could call Decline.

Seymour, Texas
photographed 12.25.2013

Fair enough

010414

After I got through looking at this building, I wandered to the vacant place next door. The sign on the front proclaimed it to be a hail-repair business (which tend to come and go, depending on the weather: this one was out of business), but the back wall held this important message.

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 12.24.2013

Shadows on a distant wall

010314

My cat, Balboa, gets credit here: if she hadn’t needed to go to the vet, I wouldn’t have driven by this vacant place and noticed what the low winter sunlight did to the dusty windows. And I wouldn’t have gone back a few days later to see what else was there.

It was a good find, and you’ll see more of this place. But for today, check out the way the peeling letters (that used to say “Sexton Automotive”) cast a shadow on that far wall.

Lubbock, Texas
photographed 12.24.2013

PS: Balboa is fine. She just needed shots. The vet called her a “big girl” which is a LOT nicer than saying she’s fat, right?