While walking in the historic district of Charleston one day, many years ago, I spotted some unusual shapes in the curves of a parked Jaguar. The hood of this black car reflected a blue sky and the warm tones of a nearby single house rising above the narrow street.
A cast iron planter in the Calhoun Mansion garden is adorned with two stately busts. These personages may date from the Victorian age, given that the mansion itself is from that period as well.
Folly Beach Pier not only attracts fisherman, but pigeons love the latticework of posts and beams for nesting, as well as the railing for the enjoyment of a seaside sunrise.
This small dock offers an ideal spot to catch a winter sunset. A canoe launched from here can enter a network of tidal creeks which take the adventurous paddler on a tranquil ride around Daniel Island, near Charleston.
Step patterns are accentuated by afternoon light and shadow at an abandoned military battery on Sullivan's Island. I shot this image on Kodachrome years ago after we moved to Charleston, and when I first began to explore my new surroundings.
The ancient ridges of the Southern Appalachian Mountains provide a setting for this sunset seen from the Blue Ridge Parkway. At one time, the Appalachians were the tallest mountains on Earth, but nearly 500 million years of erosion have drastically shortened and softened their once lofty peaks.
The Charleston County Courthouse dates from the colonial period and is one of the oldest public buildings in town. Morning light on the old restored stone gives this doorway a feeling of warmth, in spite of how much you may not wish to enter a court room full of lawyers.
A V-shaped skein of double-crested cormorants takes wing over the Atlantic Ocean near Folly Beach. These sea birds, and others, flock just offshore in the winter, and offer interesting birdwatching especially when the light is good.
I zeroed in on the "bullseye" on this gate scroll while making sure to align it with the garden path receding in the background. This gives the image a sense of place, picturing a Charleston home and garden in an indirect yet evocative way.
A landmark of Renaissance Italy is the Duomo of Florence, otherwise known as the Bascilica di Santa Maria del Fiore. Brunelleschi built its famous dome in the 15th century, the largest one of its time. The elaborate facade, designed by Emilio De Fabris, was completed more than 300 years later in 1887.
At dusk along Shem Creek, restaurant lights reflect in the water. I used a quick camera motion to create short "brush strokes" of the illuminations which blurred colors to make this abstract.
What better way to begin the day than a jog on the beach, with the warm shining sun over the sea, the hissing waves of the surf, and the cooling sea breeze.
At an entry to a house in the historic district, a lantern flame burns steadily, like the advancement of time itself. So, a new year begins in the old city of Charleston, marking the 344th year since it's founding in 1670.