Blog Archives

It was all yellow

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We spent the day driving around with some friends – those rare kinds of friends who really don’t mind if you want to stop approximately every seven minutes to take a picture of something you saw beside the road. I’ve written about this before, about feeling rushed when you’re with people who are used to your peculiar ways, and how it can have a negative impact on your work. But these friends got it and didn’t mind stopping – in fact, they encouraged it. And, even better: they suggested some places to go that they thought I’d like.

This was one of their suggestions, and it was a treasure of visuals. Like this room, that used to be even more yellow than the way I saw it.

Check back for more shots from the Day of Driving and Photographing.

Lubbock County, Texas
photographed 5.24.2014

Lighted entry

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There’s just something about New Mexico – the color palette that is favored on painted surfaces, the desert light, the way the dry air and hot summers bake the color off of wood – that I find particularly attractive.

And, then, when you can add in cracked stucco and an old light above an entry…

Roswell, New Mexico
photographed 5.10.2014

To mark the decline

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In the parts of the country where I do most of my shooting, plywood and chipboard are very popular building materials. Unfortunately for the towns and the people who are still trying to live there.

It’s hard to imagine that a structure completely boarded up will ever make a return. And if that’s the case, these boards have marked a lot of decline.

Roswell, New Mexico
photographed 5.10.2014

An open mouth

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That shadow makes me think of a big, open mouth. That’s just me, isn’t it?

Roswell, New Mexico
photographed 5.10.2014

Cistern

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This old place has a lot going for it – weather wood siding, some elm trees, and a red-brick cistern.

Dexter, New Mexico
photographed 5.10.2014