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DPChallenge Forums >> Tips, Tricks, and Q&A >> QOTD: Brett Weston
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Showing posts 1 - 5 of 5, (reverse)
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10/25/2002 09:00:28 AM · #1
"The taint of age can be very beautiful. The wreckage of man-made objects is something more beautiful than the new. Rust and weathering adds a patina of . . . well, I call it 'elegant shit' or 'elegant gorp'." - Brett Weston (1911-1993)

Click Here to learn more about Brett Weston...

10/25/2002 09:49:16 AM · #2
I couldn't agree with this statement more. I have always been attracted to, and admired the beauty of rust, rotting wood, dried leaves and flowers, verdigris copper, and peeling paint. Come to think of it, I prefer vintage clothes and purses, antique china and furniture and more. I like to tease my husband and tell him that's why I chose him...lol (He's a whopping 5 years older than I am)
Older things have so much more character. This is evident in the faces of old and wrinkled people. You can usually tell what kind of life they've had, to some degree.
I like juxtapositions too...eg: young hand clasped in an elderly hand.

It's not old, but have you seen my picture that has been called
Fruit Calligraphy ? Check it out!
10/25/2002 11:15:56 AM · #3
Originally posted by Gracious:
I couldn't agree with this statement more. . .It's not old, but have you seen my picture that has been called
Fruit Calligraphy ? Check it out!


Cool photo! If you can twist up a few more letters you can turn it into a display font and make a few bucks!
This was more a family snapshot than great art, but I was trying for that juxtaposition...Into The Woods.
10/25/2002 12:45:33 PM · #4
John Cleese narrated a TV series recently about the human face, and one thing he said in, I think, the final episode was striking. It was that the beauty of youth is something you're born with, but the beauty of an aged face is created by all the expressions, laughter, crying, etc. you've done through your lifetime. If you're a kindly, happy person it gets written all over your face in your lifetime. He showed the Dalai Lama as an example.

This kind of applies to all objects, I guess. Toys that are played with by generations of children age differently to something that's weather beaten, which ages differently to something that's neglected. It's something that really draws me to old objects and buildings... and people :)
10/26/2002 12:37:47 AM · #5
When I get old and look at myself in the mirror, will I wish that I had laughed more or cried more to make myself more beautiful? Perhaps...
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