Here are some additional images from that day.
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J.T. Barham and Company feed and seed store, Capron, Virginia (click to enlarge) Fujifilm X-H1; 16-55mm f/2.8 lens @ 20mm; 1/680th sec. @ f/11; ISO 800 |
My mind may then drift to wonder about the future as each year there are fewer farms, fewer villages and towns and more urban and suburban growth, fundamentally changing our country. I'm not saying this change is bad, just different from the past. Good or bad it is what it is. I just want to record what was so those in the future can appreciate the past also.
Join me over at Instagram @dennisamook or my website, www.dennismook.com.
Thanks for looking. Enjoy!
Dennis A. Mook
All content on this blog is © 2013-2019 Dennis A. Mook. All Rights Reserved. Feel free to point to this blog from your website with full attribution. Permission may be granted for commercial use. Please contact Mr. Mook to discuss permission to reproduce the blog posts and/or images.
Thanks for a look at small towns in your neck of the woods Dennis. I grew up in a town of about 2,000 in NW Ohio, with plenty of railroad tracks as well.
ReplyDeleteWhen I go to visit, I get some strange looks when wandering about with a camera. The residents must be asking themselves, what is there to photograph here?
Jim, as you probably know, I am a railroad enthusiast. Recently, I found a YouTube channel that has live cameras around the country aimed at various railroads. One is in Deshler, Ohio. There are two railroads that cross at a diamond downtown. Probably not far from home.
DeleteYep, Deshler is about 12 miles from Leipsic, where I grew up. We had a discussion, maybe last summer, about trains and John Dillinger as well. He also had some connections to Leipsic.
DeleteJim, I remember. What gear are you using now? Still have the Fuji gear?
DeleteNo Dennis, I'm still a m4/3 guy. And still battling the FOMO disease. LOL
DeleteThese two blogs and their accompanying photos are wonderful. It really puts an exclamation point on how times have changed. Thank you for these very thought provoking photo narratives.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words and compliments. One of my photographic goals over the past almost 50 years has been to document those things that are going away but should be remembered. I find so many really good, grounded people in small towns. I’m one to engage others and try to get them to tell me their stories as the story with the photo makes a nice pairing.
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