This sign looked to me it came straight out of the 50s. It tells people what to do with their communal bins.
I just loved the wood and crumbling plastered wall texture.
Continue reading “Bin etiquette”This sign looked to me it came straight out of the 50s. It tells people what to do with their communal bins.
I just loved the wood and crumbling plastered wall texture.
Continue reading “Bin etiquette”I’m not an invasive photographer. When I take photos in the street, I tend to take people passing by from a good distance. And as I’m obsessed with doors and doorways, I have a lot of people walking past doors.
Continue reading “Walking past”This is tunnel under the Grand Trianon in Versailles. Probably used by servants to move around without being seen.
I loved the stone work and the wood floor with lots of details and texture.
Continue reading “Tunnel”I don’t know.
Continue reading “Stools”Hello photographers of the Fediverse,
Let me float an idea.
I’ve been thinking for a good while about what I miss when I look at people’s posts. We all enjoy looking at photos people publish, and we can favourite and we can boost. But in these days of mass media consumption, what I’m missing is spending time on photos and understanding the ones that attract my eye.
Continue reading “Photographers of the Fediverse assemble!”Having lived in Scotland for a long time, the end of summer for me is those hay bales with a lightly clouded sky (a change from the winter grey).
Continue reading “Hay bales”I used to collect old film cameras. This is my favourite because I was given it by my grandfather.
Continue reading “Zeiss Ikon”The French Atlantic coast is littered with WWII fortified structures left over from the Nazi Atlantic Wall. They’re starting to degrade significantly.
Continue reading “Blockhaus at the top of the dune”for some reason, this ceiling light well has an interesting pattern. I don’t know if that was on purpose.
Continue reading “Light well”It’s fun to take monochrome images at night. But challenging without a tripod (some places don’t allow tripods so I only use one for landscapes).
This was a bridge along the canals of Amsterdam. The reflection of the lights in the water attracted me. But I didn’t frame it wide enough (I was at the widest and couldn’t walk back any more) so I couldn’t correct the perspective of the buildings.
Continue reading “Amsterdam bridge at night”