Photos from where I've lived, photos from where I've traveled, and photos of interesting stuff (people, things). Basically, I take pictures of nouns.
Texas, As Far As the Eye Can See
Taken from the South Rim of Big Bend National Park, overlooking all of Texas below.
This was growing out of a stonewall, and so I just leaned back to take this photo. A disorienting angle.
The "worms" are just moss growing out of the wood but the way it grew was strange and the black-and-white photo perfectly captured the strange look, as if the wood bore maggots.
A picturesque scene of Creede, Colorado.
Taken in the eerie White Sand Dunes National Monument.
I love old cars, especially muscle cars. This one was a great color and, since I knew I couldn't have it, I had to have a photo of it.
Austin Art: From Wall to Wall
This photo begins my series on Austin art. From stickers to paintings I have photographed my favorite art in the city that lives on side walls and on telephone poles. I hope to preserve the art that I know will change and fade over time if only so that I can look back on the city I used to live in ten years from now.
I think this is my favorite type of street art: the kind that is out of sight behind businesses and goes unnoticed until someone points it out to you.
I've been told this means "Third Culture Kid" but I don't know why it was written twice. Once is normal, three times might make sense but two times is strange.
The sticker is actually a reflective silver and the blue and white on it is the sky.
I don't know what this is, but it seemed interesting. And the title is without proper punctuation because the sticker was if you can see that.
This looks like an animé hero to me with a sword by his side, but I really can't tell.
I love the scratches made over the spray-paint especially because they were nearly impossible to see.
I think this was a swan but I don't remember and I don't really know geese from swans anyway.
Taken at the Five-and-Dime Resale shop on East 6th St.
I like this photo in black-and-white but I couldn't resist leaving the ladybird in red.
My sister and her friend playing in the shade, just about to bike down the street.
I'm not sure if this looks as cool as it was to photograph, so here goes: I put this mirror on my table which there was a light over, then placed a normal ring on top of the mirror (the far right one in the "Shadow Hand" photo). I then stretched my arm out over and above the mirror with a camera in my other hand and began playing twister with positioning so that I could make the ring appear enlarged while trying to make it seem as though I were holding it while trying to keep the rest of my body out of the photo. Exhale.
Looks really cool now, right?
This is probably not considered an original idea because someone else is likely to have done this before, but, for all who care, I thought that one up myself. Yeah...