August 2024

POTD: Home Ground #7

Home Ground #7
Bozeman, Montana
2024

Miscellaneous art work and other items on display on our stairway. If you are a fan of my crow and raven photographs, you might be interested to know that it was that crow photograph on the wall that started it all for me, in that it was the first crow photo I ever took. It’s called Wet Ride and features a soggy wet crow perched on the handlebars of a bicycle on the narrow streets of Gamla stan, the historic old town in Stockholm, Sweden. It was a just a quick photograph in a chance encounter but I liked it enough that I was motivated to go out and photograph other crows and ravens.

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POTD: Home Ground #3

Home Ground #3
Bozeman, Montana
2024

I bought this old iron bed frame in 1970 at a garage sale (for $3 as I recall) the first time I moved away from home when I was starting college. It came with an open spring foundation and ratty mattress which were immediately discarded in favor of a cast-off mattress and box springs from my parents. It’s been with me ever since. At some point I converted it to hold a queen-size rather than full mattress, but is otherwise unchanged. It was quite old in 1970 so is really old now. The light (great for reading in bed) is also old although we’ve only had it for some 40 years after purchasing it at one of those sales I referred to in yesterday’s post.

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POTD: Home Ground #2

Home Ground #2
Bozeman, Montana
2024

Many of the fixtures in our house, such as the glass doorknob seen here, were purchased at farm sales and estate auctions around this part of Montana in the 80s as we were building the home. These items, besides generally being cheap, also  thus adding instant cred to the antique feel we were going for in the home. The 40 years since then has added to their antique qualities.

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POTD: Home Ground #1

Home Ground #1
Bozeman, Montana
2024

I’ve always admired the photographs and writings of Wright Morris, who took quiet photos of the objects and environs in people’s day to day lives back in the 1940s and 50s that, while only rarely showing actual people in them, revealed compelling vignettes of those people’s lives. He also wrote extensively about life in those times (fiction and nonfiction), but to me it is the photos themselves that have the greatest impact.

The Fashion Queen and I spent 20 years designing and building our own home in the mountains and twice that long filling it with things that have made it a home to us. It occurred to me recently that our house and contents are old enough now to certainly be considered interesting in the sense that it has that patina of age and use that may lend itself to interesting visual storytelling. That is perhaps especially true given we built the house to begin with features reminiscent of homes from the Victorian Age.

It’s not in my wheelhouse to write the kind of prose that Morris did to go along with his photos, but I can make a good stab at the photography end of such storytelling. So recently I started working on a series of images of our house, documenting various architectural details and the still life tableaus to be found just about anywhere you look in the place. It’s a work in progress and will be presented in no particular order. I’m expecting many “do-overs” in regard to some of the images that may not be quite right the first time around.

In the years leading up to designing and building our house, I tried my hand at furniture. The bookcase in this photo was one of those projects.

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