Category Archives: Art

Sticker Collections around the World

 

Stickers can come in many different shapes and sizes and also vary widely in color and design. They are often stuck to items such as lunchboxes, signs, lockers, notebooks, walls, cars, or windows, used as name tags, and so on. R. Stanton Avery is credited with creating the first self-adhesive sticker in 1935.

The following is a collection of stickers I have discovered in my travels around the world.

In Chama, New Mexico, while on an Arizona Highways Photo Workshop, I found these motorcycles plastered with stickers from their riding adventures. The riders have spent a LOT of time and miles on these bikes.

In Gatlinburg, Tennessee we ate at a restaurant that seems to have invited folks to share their stickers on their windows. My favorite was the Hopi Radio sticker from right here in Arizona.

 

These two collections were found in New York City last summer.

These two were in Marin County in northern California.

The surf town of Bolinas, CA.

My hometown of Flagstaff, Arizona, and Arizona Snow Bowl.

Snow Bowl

Denver, CO

Morro Bay, CA

Tea houses on our Everest Base Camp Trek in Nepal.

San Diego, CA

And finishing where I started, another cross-continent motorcycle found at the South Rim, Grand Canyon.

Music we enjoyed

 

Music and people, people and music. You can’t have one without the other. It was tricky separating these two keywords as they are somewhat interchangeable.

Our first full-on musical encounter was in Progreso, Mexico when through the market came a family band. It looked like mom, dad, and three boys. Dad was on clarinet, the two older boys were on drums, the youngest had the donation cup and mom followed along, keeping an eye on her brood. They were really quite good but gone before I could get my camera out after our donation to take a decent picture. The sad part? The boys were working and not in school. We were there in April.

Our main musical encounter was, you guessed it, New Orleans! We were there for their first French Quarter Jazz Festival since Covid.

There were plenty of solo guitar players, some with donation tins and some not.

Definitely some well-worn guitars.

This guy had his karaoke music playing and was singing his heart out for a buck.

And some were just playing for themselves.

Then the parade began and the jazz bands came marching down Bourbon Street.

You can almost hear the music while looking at these images.

The Navy even sent some musicians. The fellow below was FULL of personality. Imagine if THIS is how we went to war and we wound up making music together instead of death and destruction. If only…

On a street corner, we ran into this quintet playing some interesting instruments. There was a standup base and a washboard among the crew.

Raw talent if you ask me, riding a bike with this big drum.

I’m not sure who this is but a painting was made of her and she was selling CDs. She was an amazing clarinet player with a small band on a street corner in NOLA.

We ran into Mai-Mai (My-My?) near some statues in Armstrong Park. He was just hanging out on the park bench, chatting with people and playing his guitar. We listened and talked with him for a while. Such a sweet man.

Dollywood had some great Bluegrass bands playing as well. The South definitely did not disappoint in the music department.

Buildings along the Way…

Buildings. I love them. I love their form, their function, their stories, and their history. This was one of the tougher edits as far as choosing what to share. Architecture in the south and east is so very different than what we have out west, especially in New Orleans. I couldn’t get enough.

But first! a quick word about keywords. I changed one of my main themes from architecture to buildings and here’s why: buildings, in my mind, is a broader subject. It includes, for me, all things built by humans. It could be a pool, a bridge, homes, skyscrapers, windows, doors, door knobs, gates, fences, and the like. Those are actually some of my keywords under buildings. Here are all nine of them: doors, windows, interior, brick, church, gate, historic, stone, and house. I’m not sure I’m married to this list and it will change as my subject choices change, but that’s what I have at this point in time.

Beyond the main theme, you could honestly just keep going with subsets. For example, one could pull up all church images, change the preset to churches and continue to add keywords like steeple, stained, glass, pews, altar, religious, etc.

Our first stop on our adventure was with some old, dear friends in Portal, AZ. We stayed in our camper, and they slept in the yurt. We ate and lounged in the yurt as well. We cooked and used the bathroom in the tiny house on the right, which is hooked up to a cistern and a septic tank.

Portal is an unincorporated community in Cochise County,  in southeastern Arizona. We got off I-10 and drove 25 miles south-southeast of San Simon on the east side of the Chiricahua Mountains. This area is often called the Yosemite of Arizona. The community is also a popular location for birding. 

One of our Harlingen, TX days was spent in South Padre Island. To get there we had to drive through Port Isabel, part of the Brownsville–Harlingen–Raymondville – Matamoros metropolitan areas. Established as a town after the Mexican War of Independence, Port Isabel became an important cotton-exporting port before the American Civil War. The harbor, town, and lighthouse all were fought over and exchanged hands during the Civil War.

This is the pool at our funky RV park in Walasco. It was heaven. We mostly had it to ourselves as most park inhabitants had already fled the heat and gone back to Canada.

This is Ellen’s childhood home. The owners were SO lovely and let us come in a poke around. Ellen shared childhood stories she could recall and it was fun to listen to how the house USED to be when she was a kid.

This is cousin David’s home in Houston. He does a lecture series at Rice University when he is in town, exercising the mind you know, and we joined him. I could have done a whole blog alone on the architecture of Rice University.

On our way to Galveston, we couldn’t pass up the Johnson Space Center. We did a tour of the grounds and drove by this building that still contains a Saturn V rocket. It was really long.

On to Galveston. The above image had three main theme hits, animals, art, and buildings. I chose to share it in buildings. I believe this was part of a restaurant.

We found an oil rig museum that was quite interesting.

There were a lot of beautiful buildings in Galveston. Some had plaques on them that announced that they had survived the big hurricane of 1900.

Following south Texas, we headed to Fountainbleau State Park on the north shore of Lake Ponchatrain in Louisiana. It was beautiful and we really wished we had our bikes there. There was an alligator in the pond, Spanish moss hanging from the trees and we were about 40 minutes from NOLA across the causeway.

We spent two days in New Orleans, one just walking around and taking it all in, the other we met my cousin Dave, from Houston, and watched the French Quarter Music Festival parade for the first time in two years (due to Covid). I’ll explore more of that with Music.

The interesting buildings in NOLA were endless.

Peeling paint, color, style, NOLA had it all.

This is a view of the main house of the Whitney Plantation. Such beautiful grounds but such devastating human stories.

We then found ourselves in Houston, Mississippi, another of Ellen’s old stomping grounds. She lived here for 18 months around her freshman year in high school (1969). This lunch counter at Parson’s Drugstore no doubt saw some sit-ins at some point.

Here is a picture of City Hall and Ellen’s old house.

The Hillsborough, Chapel Hill, and Raleigh areas of North Carolina had amazing architecture as well. I learned that Duke and the University of North Carolina, arch college basketball rivals, are across town from each other. Both have BEAUTIFUL campuses.

These images are from the Duke University chapel. Below are the catacombs where a few past university presidents are buried.

On to Cincinnati! We found this set of steps on a trail in the middle of the city.

The skyline of Cincinnati and the Purple People Bridge that connects Ohio and Kentucky.

Following Ohio we headed to Nebraska with a stop near Iowa City. We learned of the Amana Colonies so we went there to walk around and have lunch before driving to St. Paul, NE.

The Amana Colonies are a set of seven villages located near Iowa City.  The villages were built and settled by German Radical Pietists, who were persecuted in their homeland. Calling themselves the True Inspiration Congregations, they first settled in New York near Buffalo in what is now the town of West Seneca. However, seeking more isolated surroundings, they moved to Iowa in 1856. They lived a communal life until 1932.

For eighty years, the Amana Colony maintained an almost completely self-sufficient local economy, importing very little from the industrializing American economy. The Amanians were able to achieve this independence and lifestyle by adhering to the specialized crafting and farming occupations that they had brought with them from Europe. Craftsmen passed their skills and techniques on from one generation to the next. They used hand, horse, wind, and water power, and made their own furniture, clothes, and other goods. The community voted to form a for-profit organization during the Great Depression.

Today, the Seven Villages of Amana are a tourist attraction known for their restaurants and craft shops. The colony was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1965.

That evening we landed at the farm in St. Paul, NE, following a harrowing thunder/dust storm that prompted tornado warnings as it moved northeast at 65 mph. That is not a typo…65 mph.

On the farm property is a one hundred-plus-year-old farm, the oldest barn in the county. These milk jugs and lanterns were found in this barn.

Our final stop was Denver to visit our daughter, Chelsea, my brother Jonathan and his family, and our good friends the Prows.

We parked a street off of the Santa Fe Arts District and found these windows in the church we parked in front of. I loved them.

That’s it on the buildings keyword. There was so much more to share but in the tradition of keeping this blog short and to the point this is what I have.

Next week is another of my favorite subjects…transportation!

Happy shooting!

 

Art along the Way

There will be a minimum of nine posts in this series. Why nine? Because Lightroom allows me nine keywords that I have put in my “main themes” preset. Last week’s blog is the tenth as it was my introductory post on my keywording system, AND an introduction that we have returned and to expect the stories of the images. So, here we go.

As previously stated I currently have the following keywords in my “main themes” preset: art, buildings, food, music, nature, people, signs, transportation, and urban. Today’s theme is art.

In my first edit, I do a couple of things. I mark poor quality photos with an X to later delete, a P which flags “wow” images for future editing, and assign groups of images with at least one, sometimes more than one,  keyword, usually from my main themes list, for future keywording. In this case, I then pulled up all of the art images to further assign keywords. I typed art into the keyword set box and nine more words came up to make it easy to further identify photos. Those keywords are folk, glass, graffiti, metal, murals, painting, patterns, statues,  and stickers. I’m in the early stages of setting up these presets and as I discover better words to use I adjust the preset.

Another thing I’d like to point out is that I only had three cameras with me, an iPhone 8, a Canon Powershot S120 point and shoot, and a Lumix DX8 micro 4/3 body with my “travel” lens, a 28-300 equivalent. I’ll identify each image with the camera used.

That being said, let’s check out the art!

iPhone 8

When we got blown off the beach at Padre Island National Seashore and headed to Harlingen we had to find a way to fill our three additional days. On our first extra day, we went to South Padre Island, driving through Port Isabelle on the way. SPI as the locals refer to it is the polar opposite of the National Seashore. It is developed and very touristy. Think south Florida. On our way over we stopped to walk around Port Isabelle and found this dolphin sculpture. It turns out they are everywhere. This is Port Isabelle’s public art animal.

As a side note, these two art pieces were also assigned the main themes keyword of animals.

iPhone 8

On SPI you have to walk under this great big turtle to get into a store that sells all things beach.

iPhone 8

We also discovered that, in Walasco, we were about six miles from Progresso, Sonora. Yay! Mexico for a day! This wall, however, was at a restaurant we ate at in Harlingen upon our return.

Canon S120 Powershot

In Houston with my cousin Dave and his spouse Bong, while wandering around downtown, we came upon this musician.

Lumix

We only gave Galveston one day and really enjoyed ourselves wandering around and looking at the old buildings and seaport life. This sculpture was out at the end of a dock near the oil well museum.

Lumix

Oh yes, now we’re in New Orleans. Lots of art here. This cane belongs to our Voodoo Museum tour guide.

Lumix

We were in NOLA for the first French Quarter Music Festival since Covid and there were a lot of art vendors for our enjoyment.

Lumix

We were in Lousiana for three days, on the second day we went out to the Whitney Plantation Museum. It was a sobering experience and is the only plantation in Louisiana that focuses on the lives of the slaves more than the plantation owners. These two statues were outside of a slave house.

Lumix

We found this art exhibit in Dollywood. For me, it was the highlight. As much as we LOVE Dolly Parton we did not love her theme park. Maybe I’m just over theme parks and their fakeness. Oh well, the umbrellas were cool.

We rescued Dollywood day by leaving and heading to Gatlinburg. Evonne had told us that Gatlinburg is a popular place for the folks in Cincinnati to vacation. We began at the visitor center and found a Skyride that takes you to the top of a mountain where you can walk across suspension bridges and take in the views. More on that later. What you get here in the art blog is a sticker on the window of the restaurant we ate at from Hopi Radio!!

iPhone 8

Lumix

We didn’t spend enough time in the Asheville, NC area but I DID manage to find this very cute statue in a neighbor’s yard. I could do a whole post on just art in Asheville.

iPhone 8

in the Hillsborough, NC area these are the two art items that made the cut. The above dog is leaning up against my cousin’s house and below is one of a hundred mosaics, part of a public art project where folks can create a mosaic with the theme of I Love Hillsborough.

iPhone 8

iPhone 8

A shark-headed girl, sitting on a bench, in the lobby of an art museum, in Cincinnati. I loved it.

Lumix

This is a May Pole blowing in the wind in the Amana Colonies of Iowa. We were turned on to this adventure by a friend we were texting with who used to live in Iowa. It’s so great to be able to add last-minute adventures while traveling.

iPhone 8

Now we’re in Denver, our last stop before heading home. The above blanket made of old ski sweaters was found in a thrift store in Iron Springs located in the mountains outside of Denver. They have lovely hot springs there and Colorado Style pizza. More on that later.

iPhone 8

One afternoon we drove down to the Santa Fe Arts District in Denver to wander around and see what art was on display. This is what we found.

iPhone 8

iPhone 8

iPhone 8

iPhone 8

I hope you enjoyed the brief art exhibit of our seven-week journey. Until next week!

Happy shooting!