Blog Archives
Chair
Anyone who’s read this blog for very long knows that I always try to look around behind these old buildings. Sometimes that’s where the good stuff is.
So, this chair. I found it behind that drive in from yesterday. The first thing I noticed was how the woven stripes in the upholstery weathered differently – half of the fabric was in relatively good condition, while the other half was just threads. The second thing I noticed was that hole in the wall to the right of the chair. For some reason, that hole seems…ominous.
Midland, Texas
photographed 8.23.2014
A pair of shots
One of the most interesting things that have happened to me since I started blogging is that I’ve made friends through blog connections. I surely never saw that coming.
For the past couple of years, blogger Ehpem and I have struck up a friendship. It was a nice happenstance that on a recent work trip to the Pacific Northwest I was able to meet Ehpem (who was just as nice in person as I’d expected). We spent part of two days making photos in Victoria, and we’ve posted many of these shots on our respective blogs.
One of the places Ehpem took me was Fan Tan Alley, where we stood shoulder-to-shoulder and made photos of some construction work. And so, here’s the first ever cooperative posting from One Day | One Image and Burnt Embers:
Want to see what Ehpem said about these same photos?
Victoria, British Columbia
photographed 8.3.2014
Two lights
This is one of those design ideas that might have looked really good on paper, but which didn’t really work out that well when the building was finished.
The lower level of the Lubbock Memorial Civic Center (where no one goes, mostly) has some broad pedestrian walkways that lead…well, they sort of don’t lead anywhere. But they don’t mind if you take their portrait.
And those two little lights work hard to light the way, in case someone happens to walk by.
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 8.16.2014





