Monthly Archives: December 2010

The Burg. The Port. The Beach. The Ville.

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This blog basically covers some of my travel between October 23 and December 8, 2010 – Spartanburg, Shrevesport, Myrtle Beach, and Nasvhille. Ready? Here goes:

SPARTANBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA

Trespassing at an abandoned truck stop across the street from my hotel:


Abandoned IV (2010)

SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA

I hadn’t traveled to Shreveport since visiting with my parents as a teenager. There’s a riverside with a slew of pretty tacky casinos (great food though!) While there, I was very fortunate to have an extra day to roam around by myself and explore downtown a bit:

My black and whites are getting grimier and moodier with every shoot. I’ve been trending this way for the last year and I’m unsure exactly why I’m doing it. Yet.


406 Cotton (2010)


Hotel 6 King Street (2010)


Hotel (2010)

And of course, you know I have to show tagging some love:

MYRTLE BEACH, SOUTH CAROLINA

You’d think a trip to the Carolina coast, even in November would be relatively warm, right? WRONG! I woke up at a 5 a.m. to capture the Second Street Pier at sunrise. It was 25 degrees Fahrenheit with a bitter wind chill down into the teens. As I shivered uncontrollably with tripod, camera, and remote trigger in hand, I thought to myself, “So this is what death must feel like.”


Second Street Pier (2010)

By sunset it was much warmer in the low-40′s. This is a scene at the Myrtle Beach State Park Pier. I was actually parked at a different pier when the colors came ablaze and I could see this scene in the distance. Driving to the pier would’ve meant taking about 15 minutes to travel by car, park, and pay a fee to enter the park and get to the pier. Time was of the essence, so I ran (yes, ran) about 1/2 mile with my camera equipment and tripod slung over my shoulder to catch this scene. It’s stunning I didn’t collapse, really.

I’m not sure what happened here…whether I accidentally bumped the tripod, triggered the camera while adjusting or what, but the result of this capture seemed interesting.

And this is the finished “polished” photo.


Sunset over Myrtle Beach (2010)

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

Nashville. Man, what to say about that. It reminds me a bit of Los Angeles. Huge music scene, respected art scene, and ugly as sin. I didn’t bring myself to capture any of the iconic downtown buildings, though with more time, I might’ve considered it. The afternoon I arrived and parked downtown, I exited my vehicle and caught a baseball lying on the curb:


Love the Game (2010)

…then walked downtown a bit.

Nashville has a slew of industrial and old mercantile and manufacturing facilities that I would’ve loved to explore further. I think it’s enough to merit a return trip just for those buildings.

If you’re an architect or have studied architecture, or visited Greece, you must be like…WTF? Yes. That is exactly what you think it is. It’s an precise true-to-scale replica of the Parthenon in aggregate concrete, the only one of its kind outside of the actual Greek Parthenon. So I had a bit of fun toying with it in black and white.

That’s it for now, everyone enjoy their holiday season and have a great New Year!

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2010 NC State Fair: October 14-24, 2010

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Previous fair blogs:
2009, Part II
2009, Part I
2008

On the first evening of the fair, I was to meet up with several people with one of my photography meetup groups to walk around the state fair. I got there a bit early, in time for sunset, and shot some photographs of Dorton Arena and the fairgrounds.


October 14, 2010 6:27pm (2010

The meetup was fun and the people were great. Desiree was using a handmade pinhole camera attachment with her digital camera and Sal was experimenting with video. I shot a bit but mostly had fun just taking in the sights.

Between trips out of town, I returned to the state fair on the 20th and 24th for my own personal shooting. I mostly concentrated on long-exposures and using my tilt-shift lens. Below are a couple of tilt-shift photos, with mixed degrees of success:


Swing (2010)

I’ve seen and shot so many long-exposures of ferris wheels that I wanted to do something different this time. I searched all over the fairgrounds until I spotted probably the least-used ferris wheel in the entire fair in the background against one of the slides (and its star props) in the foreground.


Hey Now You’re An All-Star (2010)

As you can tell, I found it quite addicting and couldn’t stop myself:


Dial 9 (2010)

That’s it, until next year!

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Duke Gardens: October 9, 2010

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Seriously, how behind am I? In early October I went with the Triangle Photography Club Meetup to Duke Gardens. I needed a break, stayed for about an hour. It was the first real opportunity I got to shoot my new 24-70mm L (which is now my longest range lens – and by the time you’re reading this…no longer new). Many of you who are familiar with the lens may be wondering how it’s possible for me to have gone so long without it. Well, with my subject matter I almost shoot exclusively wide angle – so sue me. However, after testing out the 24-70, I LOVE IT and have begun to lean on it heavily as a walkaround lens. I really l dig how flexible the lens is and the amount control and precision one can have with light entering the lens and depth of field. It’s performance at high ISO is phenomenal.

These are the shots I managed to capture. Keep in mind I’m not a “I love to shoot flowers and nature” type of guy, so of course I gravitated to a lot of hardscape.

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