Today is labor day. In honor of labor day I’m going to share with you three labor day photos.

Travis & Brad at Life Cafe.

Tim in our backyard.

Heart-shaped Elephant Ear’s I planted last month.
Today is labor day. In honor of labor day I’m going to share with you three labor day photos.

Travis & Brad at Life Cafe.

Tim in our backyard.

Heart-shaped Elephant Ear’s I planted last month.
As soon as I got back to Brooklyn (7:30 am after a 13 hour bus ride) I busted out the black and white and got down to processing. Two hours later – voila!
I took a few time lapse photos at night while I was in Cleveland and they really add the variety I was looking for to this project, giving it a little more depth. Plus they look really great.
Look closely in this one. At the pay phone on the right side is a woman standing. She hardly moved during the entire one minute exposure and I think she might be as sharp as the building itself. Can’t wait to print this one larger and see how she looks.

The next two were both taken in Cleveland, and the last one is the current pièce de résistance, known as “The Tower.” That photograph was taken in Bushwick off Knickerbocker Avenue.



They’re beautiful, they’re big, and they change color according to the acidity levels in the soil. And they’re fun to play around with in an arrangement. In light of the last post being so morbid, I thought I’d share a pretty picture of the flower arrangement I made today.

I used blue hydrangeas, white snapdragons, waxflower, orange roses and magnolia leaves. This is one of my favorite ones so far because of the colors, especially the way the waxflower looks against the blues in the hydrangea.

Flowers are fabulous.
This past week I started on a new project of time lapsed night scenes. For now they are all taken in Bushwick, but I fully intend to do this wherever I go, now that I know what I’m looking at. I don’t have a light meter because they cost a fortune and do what brains can do, so I did a lot of bracketing. Each scene was shot at 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 minutes, and every image came out, which was the most exciting thing that’s happened to me all week.
Going forward, I’m going to shoot at a lower iso to reduce some of the graininess and bracket at 1, 3, 5, and 7 minutes. The images below are two I picked out and did quick scans of. I am seriously looking forward to actually making darkroom prints of these. And I’m contemplating doing a few in color just to see if I like the color of the street lights.

George Street between Central and Wilson, 8 minutes

Jefferson Street between Irving and Wyckoff, 6 minutes
Both images were shot on Fuji Neopan 400 film at f22 between 10pm and 12am.
What happened to June?? It’s so hot I’m waking up early and going to bed late because it’s impossible to sleep. Air conditioning is no longer a part of my vocabulary. I can’t remember what it was like before sweat was a part of my wardrobe.
So I’m finding things to do when the sun goes down and things cool off. This is my backyard lit by the streetlight in the parking lot next to us. These are just some random test shots I took – dropping off the film tomorrow! And picking up a shutter release and a stop watch so I can do this properly next time.
The one taken outside was shot at 250 iso at about f4 with a 30 second exposure. The following one is of Tim, only for about 5 seconds. Next round involves black and white film and the empty streets of bushwick. And maybe some more from the backyard once the timing is more resolved. Hold me to it…


I have been working at Rose Red & Lavender since the beginning of April and not a day goes by there where I don’t learn something new and wonderful. One of the most recent projects I’ve been working on is making lots and lots of light bulb terrariums.
I started by learning how to make a larger terrarium (not pictured because it sold before I could snap a photo!). They are layered and it’s good to start with some rocks. After that, we added spanish moss, and a pretty good layer of it because it does compress quite a bit. Then a little soil and plants of your choosing! I have been using dwarf plants like rabbit’s foot fern and blue baby tears, and of course I’ve added miniature garden gnomes and tiny dinosaurs where I can.


The light bulb terrariums are a whole other ball game. They are so small you can really only use one plant. I hardly add any soil to them because it’s tiny and the inside of the glass gets dirty fast. Hollowing out the bulb was a challenge at first, but Kimberly (the garden shop’s owner) invested in a Dremel set which made the process sooo much easier and faster. Let me tell you, it is no easy feat to squeeze those plants through the bottom of a light bulb. It’s like building a ship in a bottle.


In light of last weekend being Mother’s Day and the fact that it finally feels like spring again in New York, I want to share some of the photos I’ve been taking while working at Rose Red & Lavender.
Rose Red & Lavender is an independently run florist/garden supply shop/place where you can find unique and awesome things that you will love. Photographing some of the floral arrangements has been really fun for me, both because I don’t often have an opportunity to take beautiful photos of flowers and because I’ve been able to find a few spots in the shop with really amazing and romantic lighting.
Here are some of the bouquets I’ve photographed, mostly over Mother’s Day weekend. Everything that comes out of this shop is gorgeous (and often organic or home grown) so if you’re looking for anything plant related…. it’s on Metropolitan between Leonard and Manhattan (off the Graham L stop).





One last thing I might as well mention here – this is the bouquet I sent my mom on Mother’s day (she sent me a photo of it along with a picture of our cat). I ordered these from Bows and Arrows in Dallas who were recommended to me from a friend I work with at the coffee shop. The girl who helped me on the phone was so sweet and I think the arrangement looked super cool.

At the end of April I did some work for the Northeast Kingdom, my favorite neighborhood restaurant (and possibly my favorite restaurant in New York). They wanted current photos to better capture the details and atmosphere of the place as well as behind the scenes photos in the kitchen with Chef Kevin A and his awesome staff hard at work.
Below are a few of my personal favorites from the day. Everyone there was a pleasure to work with and if you haven’t yet been to the Northeast Kingdom, get to it!





A week ago I took the bus from Penn Station to DC. It was sunny and warm (exactly the opposite of the past few days in New York) which made for a great opportunity to just walk around and enjoy the weekend.
I went down to see Sabina, a very good friend of mine, who doesn’t live there but happened to be in Washington, and to see Ann who graciously allowed me to stay in her fabulous house near Adam’s Morgan. (I did also get to spend some time with a few other great friends – you know who you are
)
Getting more to the point: while we were out and about, it struck me how many coffee shops, restaurants, corner stores that we tried to go to were actually shut down and boarded up. Mayorga Coffee, for example, used to be in the Tivoli Theater in the center of Columbia Heights, but there was hardly a trace of it when we walked over. The next closest coffee shop could hardly compare without even seating much less the comfortable and relaxed atmosphere that Mayorga gave. It was such a unique space it was hard for me to see it go.
I don’t have a recent photo of the theater/coffee shop in disrepair, but I do have a few of DC buildings, the last of which shows just a fraction of the boarded up windows we passed. Following that are a few shots of Sabina goofing around in the city…

This first one was taken in Bethesda, and in fact the blue building that you can only see a sliver of at the bottom was completely abandoned. It used to house a bar and a separate comedy club, only the skeletons of which are left, though a friend did tell us that until a few days before you could still see the tables and chairs and all the liquor was abandoned on the shelves.

I don’t actually think this General Electric plant was deserted, but it sure did look it, and it was in the Navy Yard which is pretty desolate in and of itself anyway.

As we walked around the Convention Center, we saw that this whole block of buildings had boarded up windows, and then around the corner the next block looked the same. I don’t even know what they used to be, homes maybe.
Now to the more light-hearted stuff…
