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02/06/2018 05:34:02 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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02/03/2018 03:40:19 PM |
For some reason my sense of smell comes alive with these images. Without seeing the ocean, heavy sea air fills my lungs. I enjoy these genuine places void of any pretense. Photographs made all the more interesting with your title broken into fragments. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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02/02/2018 07:20:08 PM |
You really constructed a poem out of remnants!
As you did in the "Tide" essay, you touch gingerly and then back off and return to a theme diffidently but refusing to let go.
I would have guessed that all this came from a Danish coast as I saw in some movies, a very protestant place.
But I believe all this is somewhere in Wales. A place yet to discover
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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02/01/2018 03:10:35 PM |
I wanted to be the frist to praise you for your skill with words but now Don was first! He's absolutely right - the titles are like cherries on the essay cake.
But even without that I would have been inspired by your pictures. Where are these buildings, who is or was living there, what are those objects for, why is this place abandoned? The overcast sky adds to the mysterious atmosphere.
Message edited by author 2018-02-01 15:30:51. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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02/01/2018 02:51:02 PM |
I love this photo/title combo.
But I must say the essay as a whole is very interesting, and could only be done by a closet poet. To fragment a sentence like that in a fearless way so that it can't be reassembled. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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