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Love Begins
Show & Tell
wallacepolsom
todays bird
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

@theartofmadeline
art blog(derogatory)
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Misplaced Lens Cap

Kaledo Art
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Monterey Bay Aquarium

roma★
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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almost home

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@fromthemiddle
Some new ideas, from PINETTA
SPRINGTIME SCENES IN KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI
Spring time took forever this year.
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Raised in a military family, Midwest Guide Rob Walters has lived in South Carolina, Georgia, California, New York, Nebraska, New Hampshire and Illinois. Always looking for an excuse to hit the road, he spends most of his creative energy on long drives, exploring the Midwest and beyond. He lives with his wife and soon to arrive son in Omaha, Nebraska, and chairs the Art Department at Iowa Western Community College across the river in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Follow on Tumblr at fromthemiddle.tumblr.com.
RURAL LIFE - OUR FIRST ZINE
The…Guide is the product of many hands and minds working joyously, without hope of individual reward or recognition, to accomplish something of which by and large they are proud, and diffidently offering it to the public of travelers and scholars and general readers.
—Oregon, End of the Trail (WPA, 1940)
Folks, here in our hot little hands, we have a hard copy of our very first American Guide zine. Sounds of excessive glee are echoing through the stately halls of AG HQ.
Rural Life is the unbelievably fantastic product of curator and writer Brett Klein, designer Tammy Mercure and the photographic delights of Guides EE Berger, James Bernal, Mitch Borden, Aaron Canipe, Dan Caruso, Michael Cevoli, Matt Curtis, Breonne DeDecker, Elicia Epstein, Christian Hendricks, Ben Hinceman, Roger May, Noelle McCleaf, Peter Spear, Rob Walters, and Tara Wray.
Wouldn’t you like to own one of these beauties? This full-color publication can be yours for the price of $15 + (very cheap) shipping. All profits go to supporting the amazing hard work of the photographers and creators whose words and images are featured.
We diffidently offer it to you, the public of travelers and scholars and general readers.
Get one today! Purchase on MagCloud here.
P.S. This is probably one of the most exciting days ever. We are crazy, crazy proud.
RAILROADS - NEBRASKA
Then the railroads came. The town was elated when Abraham Lincoln selected Council Bluffs as the terminal of the Union Pacific Line; later, engineers and Douglas County bonds brought it across the river to Omaha. In 1863 the construction of the Union Pacific formally began. Two years later, the first train from Omaha ran to Salings’ Grove with Gen. W.T. Sherman, of Civil War fame, and 20 leading citizens riding on flat cars with nail kegs for seats.
—Nebraska: A Guide to the Cornhusker State (WPA, 1939)
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Raised in a military family, Midwest Guide Rob Walters has lived in South Carolina, Georgia, California, New York, Nebraska, New Hampshire and Illinois. Always looking for an excuse to hit the road, he spends most of his creative energy on long drives, exploring the Midwest and beyond. He lives with his wife and soon to arrive son in Omaha, Nebraska, and chairs the Art Department at Iowa Western Community College across the river in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Follow on Tumblr at fromthemiddle.tumblr.com.
35th and Dodge, Omaha NE.
David Dondero, O'Leaver's Pub, Omaha NE. 2-2-14
Morning Drive, 2 degrees. Omaha NE --> Council Bluffs IA.
Fare thee well, Pete
Omaha Project
An edit of photographs I made Jan 5 2012.
Limited Edition Prints! Rob Walters' Photography
Fraction Magazine Holiday Print Sale
LIQUOR STORES - OMAHA, NEBRASKA
The Omaha map of alcohol outlets shows 68102 as the ZIP code area with the highest concentration of alcohol outlets, at 19.7 per 1,000 residents. The 68102 ZIP code is located within Douglas County and includes the following notable locations: the Old Market, TD Ameritrade Park, CenturyLink Center, Omaha Civic Auditorium and Convention Center, and Heartland of America Park.
Data Source: Nebraska Liquor Control Commission; United States Census Bureau
—”Underage Drinking In Nebraska,” University of Nebraska Medical Center (August, 2013)
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Raised in a military family, Midwest Guide Rob Walters has lived in South Carolina, Georgia, California, New York, Nebraska, New Hampshire and Illinois. Always looking for an excuse to hit the road, he spends most of his creative energy on long drives, exploring the Midwest and beyond. He lives with his wife and soon to arrive son in Omaha, Nebraska, and chairs the Art Department at Iowa Western Community College across the river in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Follow on Tumblr at fromthemiddle.tumblr.com.
Latest post to The American Guide.
OCALA, FLORIDA
When I think of Ocala, Florida two things come to mind: thoroughbred horses (Ocala is one of the major thoroughbred centers in the world) and John Travolta (he has a home there, complete with a 747 air strip). Now, given that there are no photographs of horses or Mr. Travolta, I’m questioning the practicality of my Ocala guide; however, what I do experience ever time I take the trip up there from South Florida is a beautiful, traditionally southern topography. Located in Marion County, the northernmost county in central Florida, Ocala is where the old southern oaks begin to give way to the tropical palms.
To be honest, I don’t know much about the history of Ocala besides what I just read on its Wikipedia page, but I’ve been taking the trip up there twice a year for the past five years and it’s always a welcome break from the resort-filled beaches of South Florida. It’s a pretty rural area, although the town seems to be sprawling more and more every year. I think I even saw a Chipotle when I was up there this past October.
Ocala’s downtown is quaint and comfortable—what you’d expect from an old Southern town. Around the outskirts of the city is where I like to go. Old motels, service stations, drive-in theaters, and the Ocala National Forest line much of the area’s highways. The rural landscapes of the Ocala National Forest could be explored for weeks. The mildly hilly terrain is covered by dense pine forests and you’re liable to come across an orange grove, or a local farmer selling fruit or boiled peanuts out the back of their old Chevy. The rivers, lakes and natural springs scattered throughout the forest make for an oasis during the hot summer months.
Maybe next time I take the trip to Ocala, I’ll try to arrange a flight with Mr. Travolta and mingle with the thoroughbred elite, but I have a feeling I’ll keep revisiting those old country roads.
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Brian McSwain was born and raised in New Orleans, but currently resides in South Florida. While a psychology graduate student, he spends the time he should be using to study on photography. Find him on Tumblr at brianmcswainphotographs.tumblr.com, follow him on Instagram and see his work on Flickr.
Limited edition prints!
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Have some prints for sale!!
Rob Walters Photography Prints