Thanks Ken. I’m sure you can relate: this picture recalls those road trips with a film camera, and although the details are blurry, I still have the contact sheets and slides.
I can almost see the usually prevailing wind direction. I like the power line running into the vanishing point here.
Yes, the west wind bending those poles as well as the imaginatively-pruned tree.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Much appreciated Philip. This picture is a favorite from my last trip north; happy you like it too.
Hi John and thanks! Have a great weekend—😊🎶😊
You as well
a gentle light- so soothing to look at
Thanks Laura, we all need more gentle and soothing at the moment.
This is a beauty – that tree is something very few people would notice but look at the way it embraces the poles and wires. I love the analog look, too.
Thanks for those interesting thoughts. You know, I shot this in the last minute of daylight; the sun raking across the scene from the fairgrounds on the left side of the image. I’m not positive, but I think that might be the most important ingredient in what you’re calling “analog.”
Right, something about the colors and light gives it that warmth and quiet that I associate with analog photos. But I suppose it’s also a certain nostalgia about the subject matter.
That’s one lonesome road, John. A great photo.
Thanks Ken. I’m sure you can relate: this picture recalls those road trips with a film camera, and although the details are blurry, I still have the contact sheets and slides.
I can almost see the usually prevailing wind direction. I like the power line running into the vanishing point here.
Yes, the west wind bending those poles as well as the imaginatively-pruned tree.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Much appreciated Philip. This picture is a favorite from my last trip north; happy you like it too.
Hi John and thanks! Have a great weekend—😊🎶😊
You as well
a gentle light- so soothing to look at
Thanks Laura, we all need more gentle and soothing at the moment.
This is a beauty – that tree is something very few people would notice but look at the way it embraces the poles and wires. I love the analog look, too.
Thanks for those interesting thoughts. You know, I shot this in the last minute of daylight; the sun raking across the scene from the fairgrounds on the left side of the image. I’m not positive, but I think that might be the most important ingredient in what you’re calling “analog.”
Right, something about the colors and light gives it that warmth and quiet that I associate with analog photos. But I suppose it’s also a certain nostalgia about the subject matter.