Frost on small branches on the trail up Game Creek south of Jackson Hole today. John Orcutt December 23, 2016 Instagram You Might Also Like Never a dull moment in Kingfield, Maine. Photo is from the second floor of our Schoolhouse. Our neighbor, Harry, is cleaning out his chimney. His wife, Debby, is either providing encouragement or supervising, not sure which. #orcuttphotography.com #kingfieldmaine #chimneysweep #nevera dullmoment May 12, 2021 Side lit, early morning light with dark clouds in the background resulted in this resplendent forest scene, bringing to mind Robert Frost’s first line in the poem, Nothing Gold Can Stay, “Nature’s first green is gold”. #forestgold #orcuttphotography.com #forest light #springtimephotography #springinwesternmaine May 30, 2021 Grain Storage on the road between Tetonia and Ashton, ID. In the book, The Dirt Meridian, Toby Jurioc quotes Frank Gohlke, master of the Texas landscape, writing about his own images of grain elevators. “I was frustrated by the discrepancy between the ordinariness of the facts surrounding the grain elevators and the intensity of my emotional responses to the objects themselves. …. The dignity of grain elevators, the precision, intelligence and grace of their formal language, their majestic presence within the landscape all seem to confirm the faith that, given the right circumstances, we will make visible the best that is within us”. February 2, 2020
Never a dull moment in Kingfield, Maine. Photo is from the second floor of our Schoolhouse. Our neighbor, Harry, is cleaning out his chimney. His wife, Debby, is either providing encouragement or supervising, not sure which. #orcuttphotography.com #kingfieldmaine #chimneysweep #nevera dullmoment May 12, 2021
Side lit, early morning light with dark clouds in the background resulted in this resplendent forest scene, bringing to mind Robert Frost’s first line in the poem, Nothing Gold Can Stay, “Nature’s first green is gold”. #forestgold #orcuttphotography.com #forest light #springtimephotography #springinwesternmaine May 30, 2021
Grain Storage on the road between Tetonia and Ashton, ID. In the book, The Dirt Meridian, Toby Jurioc quotes Frank Gohlke, master of the Texas landscape, writing about his own images of grain elevators. “I was frustrated by the discrepancy between the ordinariness of the facts surrounding the grain elevators and the intensity of my emotional responses to the objects themselves. …. The dignity of grain elevators, the precision, intelligence and grace of their formal language, their majestic presence within the landscape all seem to confirm the faith that, given the right circumstances, we will make visible the best that is within us”. February 2, 2020