It's been a beautiful late spring/early summer in East Texas, with amazing clouds and rainbows every other day as the weather shifts and changes. This is my interpretation of "street" photography where the streets turn to gravel. Hope this gives you some sense of being out here, breathing in the rich after-rain air mixed with a bit of dust and manure
RoamingScott wrote:
It's been a beautiful late spring/early summer in East Texas, with amazing clouds and rainbows every other day as the weather shifts and changes. This is my interpretation of "street" photography where the streets turn to gravel. Hope this gives you some sense of being out here, breathing in the rich after-rain air mixed with a bit of dust and manure
...I live among these curious creatures Scott! From Texas longhorns, black angus and dairy cows too numerous to mention their breeds(?).
Great images all and nice sharp, crisp compositions. I agree with Douglas about bovines not getting much credit here!
It has been a very wet cool Spring but we went right into the "air you can wear" of mid summer now. Temps in the 100's and heat indexes in the mid 100's. Wednesday it was 105F, yesterday 65F!! Today 90's......
Well done!
Dan
I live in Saul Leiter's neighborhood (as does Steve). I get up wondering what I can possibly shoot today that I haven't already. Gotta change that. ?si=XEZOLumRM0BAO8eW
I live in Saul Leiter's neighborhood (as does Steve). I get up wondering what I can possibly shoot today that I haven't already. Gotta change that. ?si=XEZOLumRM0BAO8eW
Do you and Steve-eenmyra- ever meet and shoot together Steve?
If I was a city dweller, I would be in "hog heaven" for photography!
The mundane sites to you and Steve2 are treasures to "visitor's" like me.
E.Texas reminds me of Iowa. Horizon to horizon unobstructed view!!
Dan
There may be "more" to shoot once you get out and get warmed up, but that's not it. Having things reveal themselves, the "seeing" is the same. Leiter's work isn't that different to me in quality to Eggelston's, a man who rarely left the rural South. (Both are well represented here in NYC at MoMA, Eggelston perhaps moreso.)