Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
I Wandered...
Monday, February 27, 2012
Misty Monday - Low Tide
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Saint Philip & the Spider
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Bare for Now
Friday, February 24, 2012
Residua of a Past Age
Twin Bollards, Church Street, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film) If I can beg your patience for one last image from the Hank's Seafood Cookbook... this one shows two stone bollards, the remnants of a place along Church Street where boats used to be moored. However, if you walk past here now, you will notice something missing... the water. The tidal creek that once bordered this house was filled-in during the late 18th century, so that habitable land could be expanded beyond the bounds of the old city walls. Today the surrounding neighborhood has many Revolutionary and antebellum era houses. I will leave you a few photography links for your weekend perusal... Have you ever wanted to run away to join the circus? This Vermont artist, now living in California, pursued photography as ritual and story. Lastly, see extraordinary color abstracts by Pepe Boulette. |
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Pirates and Cookbooks
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Bridge Wednesday - Twilight Glow
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Courtyard Garden
Monday, February 20, 2012
Cooking Charleston
Saint Philip's Churchyard Gate and Carriage, French Quarter, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film) As I alluded to in a previous post, Charleston has been receiving much favorable attention as a travel destination in recent months. Conde Naste Travel Magazine ranked it as the number one city to visit in North America. Fodor's Travel went even further by placing Charleston among the top 21 "to go" attractions in the world. They described it as a "buzzy" destination that is "foodie-centric" and "leading the Southern food revival". Charleston, for such a small city, is indeed graced with an abundance of fine restaurants and cafes. There is a menu for almost anyone's taste. Today's image is one that is featured in a coffee table cookbook recently published by Hank's Seafood Restaurant. It is replete with delicious recipes presented by nationally recognized chef Frank McMahon. The intent of the image is to offer a taste of Charleston's historic and charming ambience. |
Sunday, February 19, 2012
Travertine
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Time Capsule
Friday, February 17, 2012
The Edge
Palm Trunk and Shutter, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok Today's photograph illustrates color contrast between warm and cool colors, and is an apt segue into my Favorite Photographer Friday selection, Tom Mackie. He is a renown practitioner of color design, creating saturated images with vivid impact. He teaches about seeking conditions that maximize atmospheric lighting and color, conditions that create tension by being in a state of transition... for example, the edge of day and night, the edge of changing seasons, or the edge of clearing storms. My take on this visual tension is the above image, which portrays the edge of light and shadow, where the setting sun briefly illuminates textures on a palm trunk, while the background lies in deep blue shadow. I hope you take a few moments to look at his website. Have a great weekend! |
Thursday, February 16, 2012
A Wheel and the Great Beyond
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
Bridge Wednesday - Into the Darkness
Cape Creek Bridge, Coastal Highway 101, Oregon © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film. Click on image for larger view.) This arched bridge, reminiscent of an ancient Roman aqueduct, disappears into the Stygian shadows of a mountain ridge as daylight fades to night. Who knows where the road may lead, or what lies ahead... perhaps only the Fates can say. |
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Happy Valentine's Day!
Monday, February 13, 2012
Misty Monday - Veil of Obscurity
Sunday, February 12, 2012
Guardians
Bronze Door, The Basilica of Saint Anthony, Padua, Italy © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film. Click on image for larger view) Saints of the Church, like guardians of the faith, peer down at the faithful from their ornate alcoves on the Basilica of Saint Anthony's tall bronze doors. The basilica was completed in 1301 to honor Saint Anthony of Padua, who after his death became the patron saint of lost people and things. The basilica is a major destination for pilgrims from all over the globe. If you have lost something dear to you, perhaps this is the place to begin your search... "Tony, Tony, look around. Something's lost that can't be found." |
Saturday, February 11, 2012
Weathered
Friday, February 10, 2012
Friday Finials
Tourists on Legare Street, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok Finals in the shape of stylized pineapples decorate this 19th century mansion on Legare Street. Pineapples are symbolic of hospitality, a tradition that dates back to the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean. Eventually the tradition spread to Europe and then to colonial America, where pineapples became a common architectural motif, from door knockers to finials to fountains. As one of the images featured in the Spoleto Festival USA ticket brochure, this picture gives a sense of Charleston's historic setting and the old world feel that the city can sometimes convey. I've listed a few photography links to click on if you have some extra time this weekend. Here is a collection of stunning images by the renown photographer Peter Turnley. A police officer with camera makes poignant images. Finally, consider how different everything looks in the light of night. Have a good weekend. |
Thursday, February 9, 2012
A Ride Back in Time
Horse Carriage and Old Exchange Building, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film. Click on image for larger view) One of the fun ways to see historic Charleston is a horse carriage tour. It makes you feel like you have journeyed back in time, to an era when life moved at a considerably slower pace. This is one of the images from the Spoleto Festival USA website, from a section that promotes things to do when visiting the city. If you come, remember to bring your Rhett Butler and Scarlett O'Hara costumes, along with your carpetbags. But please, no scalawags or rascals allowed. |
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
City at Night
City Lights, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film)
Another one of the images used in the Spoleto Festival USA ticket brochure, one that suggests a lively night life... theater lights, restaurants, cafes, the fluxing auroras of city streets...
or maybe alien crafts landing at the site of an active volcano...
|
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Palm Tree Cloud
Palm Tree and Cloud, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok (Velvia slide film. Click on image for larger view) Palm tree fronds wave against an azure sky in this image from the Spoleto Festival USA ticket brochure. Although this picture may suggest a tropical island setting with visions of white sandy beaches, grass huts and coconuts, it's not... Charleston has more of a semi-tropical coastal climate. There are tan sandy beaches, but no grass huts or coconuts that I know about. |
Monday, February 6, 2012
Spoleto Festival USA 2012
Cover, Spoleto Festival USA 2012 Ticket Brochure © Doug Hickok |
Original Image, Riviera Theater Marquee, King Street, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok I am proud to announce that Spoleto Festival USA selected this image to feature on their ticket brochure this year. Spoleto Festival USA is one of the largest international arts festivals, not just in the USA, but in the world. It has been a center piece of Charleston attractions since it was begun here in 1977 by the founders, who were looking for an American venue to correspond with the Festival of Two Worlds in Spoleto, Italy. The two week event runs from late May through early June. Charleston was selected because it would "provide the charm of Spoleto as well as its wealth of theaters, churches and other performance spaces..." This image was made at night using a quick zoom blur with my tripod mounted zoom lens. I'll show you more images from the ticket brochure and the Spoleto website, in the following days. Stitch Design Co., an awarding winning design and marketing group, did exceptional work, as they always do, in designing the brochure and selecting images. |
Sunday, February 5, 2012
Supercalafragalisticexpealadocous
Old Ornate Gate, Saint Michael's Churchyard, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok This is a detail of one of the most famous decorative wrought iron works in Charleston, Saint Michael's Churchyard gate. It was made in 1840 by a German born blacksmith, J. A. W. Iusti. Inside the gate are the tombs of John Rutledge and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, signers of the U.S. Constitution (1787). As you may know, the first 10 amendments of the Constitution are the Bill of Rights, which allow for, among other safeguards, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and freedom of religion, etc. It furthermore allows for the drinking of coffee on a leisurely Sunday morning while humming songs from Mary Poppins... "Supercalafragalisticexpealadocous" anyone? |
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Polly
Friday, February 3, 2012
White Point Light
Late Afternoon Light, White Point Gardens, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok White Point Gardens on The Battery is a pleasant place to sightsee or simply find a place to sit and while away the hours. Light from late afternoon sun glances across the grassy grounds where outdoor weddings take place beneath the 19th century gazebo. Among other highlights, Charleston has also become one of the top wedding destinations in the U.S. For your weekend pleasure, I'll end today's post by shedding some light on these fun photography links. Hope you enjoy! A National Geographic photographer demonstrates how to use available light in a variety of situations. See phenomenal images of the recent spike in arctic aurora activity. Check out the editing process of Magnum photographers and see how a handful of great images were selected from their contact sheets. |
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Kumbayah
Sweetgrass Baskets and Camellia Petals, Charleston, SC © Doug Hickok The word of the day is Kumbayah. It is a Gullah expression which means "Come by yah" or "Come by here". Its connotation is associated with closeness or spiritual unity, and derives from a 1930's African-American spiritual. The Gullah language (also called Geechee) was the Creole spoken by slaves of South Carolina's sea islands. This sweetgrass basket image was used recently in a Town of Mount Pleasant advertisement, with the title "Kumbaya. (Come by here)". The basket design is simple, but other basket designs are quite elaborate, displaying the artistic skills of the weaver. Some are featured in art museums. The local craft of basketry is an art form brought to the Carolina Colony by slaves from West Africa. It is prominent in the fabric of Gullah culture, a weave of African and New World elements. Sweetgrass is a native plant which grows in Lowcountry tidal marshes, and is gathered and dried for basket weaving. The red flower petals are from the sasanqua camellia bush, which grows readily in our climate, and is featured in many Charleston gardens. Ironically it is not native, but derives from the southern coasts of Japan. It is a cultivar dating from the Edo period (1695-1733). This concludes your South Carolina history/biology lesson of the day! |
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Appalachian Snow
Birch Tree Trunk and Rocks, Roan Highlands, North Carolina/Tennessee © Doug Hickok A dusting of snow adds texture to tree trunk and rocks in this scene along the Appalachian Trail. Many blogs that I have visited this January have displayed beautiful images of snowy winter wonderlands. We don't have snow in Charleston, so I had to pull an image from last fall when Becky and I took a hike in the highlands of North Carolina. With an unusually warm winter (thanks to a La Nina cycle), apparently, this will be the closest thing we will have to a snowy wonderland this year. |