A Monochrome Moment on a Gray Day
“In the right light, at the right time, everything is extraordinary.” So said Aaron Rose, and it applies to gray days, too.
“In the right light, at the right time, everything is extraordinary.” So said Aaron Rose, and it applies to gray days, too.
All creatures great and small succumb to a universal truth: We don’t want to be kept out.
A photo essay shows the visual feast of texture and color that’s ripe for photo immersion across the border.
What more can you say but yellow? Turns out, there’s a lot more. But it’s Wordless Wednesday.
There are some tried-and-true ways to put the summer heat behind you: the methods are shared in photos.
How do you like to shoot tequila? Try it blanco or añejo, with lime or with salt, and add Snapseed for a finishing touch.
Isn’t everyone confined, and defined, by daily rituals? Consider the lobstermen. And the lobsters they trap.
If it’s Wednesday, it’s wordless. Those are the rules. God Bless Johnny Cash, who was never wordless in his life.
Looking for something to photograph along a hidden trail in coastal Maine, I stumbled back to a past that was still present.
You can use your iPhone like a macro camera to offer up more than one surprise inside.
Once shiny and new, and now rusted and old, these relics from the past hold me in their thrall.
With a bit of exploring and imagination, you can uncover something of the history of these deco relics.
The iPhone 5s makes a fantastic camera, especially when it’s the only one you’ve got, with an assist from Snapseed.
There’s an ebb and flow to life, like day and night, on Maine’s coastal waters.
Contrasts are frequently meaningful; but in the case of lobster traps on a Maine wharf, that depends.