Woods.
Today's Document

if i look back, i am lost

ellievsbear

Origami Around
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Peter Solarz
No title available
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

shark vs the universe

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home
NASA
EXPECTATIONS

Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature
Sade Olutola
occasionally subtle
Claire Keane

blake kathryn
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Italy

seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from South Africa
seen from South Africa
seen from Venezuela
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@michaelthornton-blog
Woods.
Grace and gratitude belong together like heaven and earth. Grace evokes gratitude like voice and echo. Gratitude follows grace like thunder lightning.
Karl Barth
Sun, Snow, Ice, Fall Colors, Mountains, River, Lake, Rocks, Blue Sky . . . Earth. #colorado #selfportrait
If we are determined to speak the plain sense of our experience, we must be willing to risk the charge of speaking what often sounds like nonsense.
Frederick Buechner, Listening to Your Life (September 19).
Overlooking South Park via the Kenosha to Georgia Pass 1776 trail, Colorado.
Congrats @anj3m !! What a privilege to shoot your engagement photographs!
#selfportrait #appalachia 2013.
#bristolsign 2013.
work day at Fred Foy's cabin just outside #damascus #appalachia
BRISTOL, TENNESSEE/VIRGINIA - (On the Occasion of My Departure)
The city is split down the middle. You can stand on State Street with one foot in Virginia and one foot in Tennessee and look up at the giant glowing sign that reads modestly, “Bristol: A Good Place to Live." From 1910 to 1921, the sign read, “PUSH!- That’s Bristol," a much more fitting and eccentric slogan for the odd and charming city.
On an average day, Clayton, a bearded man in fatigues sits checking his iPad while sitting on a bench downtown. He scans the block giving knowing nods to his friends in passing. He has chosen to live a life jumping trains and living in tents using a solar plug-in to charge his one electronic device. Around the corner, burgers are flipped at the Burger Bar where Hank Williams may or may not have eaten his last meal. (I have always imagined not, which makes the food more appetizing.) A man walks his giant pot bellied pig, passing a beautiful older woman wearing a fox fur coat while a group of girls giggle and run across the street.
It is a city that marks the passing of the year with parades and festivals. Displays for the 4th of July are erected out of soda boxes at the grocery store, people march in groups for the Christmas parade and hundreds of children hunt for Easter eggs in the park.
Like any good Southern town, the place becomes more complex the longer you stay. You learn that those who might be considered “loiterers" hang out on the Virginia side of the street so they only have a five minute walk back after a quick trip to jail, as opposed to a 40 minute drive on the Tennessee side. You find the local routes to the Speedway on the crazy race weeks, thus avoiding the temporary invasion force of 150,000 extra Bristol residents. You find out who makes moonshine in their basement and that you can enter Steele Creek Park via Rooster Front to be closer to the waterfall.
For good and bad, everyone eventually knows everyone. Most private business is semi-public. Everyone knows why a certain company downtown ran out of money and whose rich daddy is paying for it to keep running so his listless prodigal son stays busy and out of trouble. On the other hand, when tragedy strikes, the community rallies. Casseroles are delivered and ears are bent—or if the situation is too grave for words, arms intertwine.
I lived in Bristol for four years and I will miss it. On the small highways leaving the city, you will often see pairs of shoes thrown over the electric lines. Around here, that means you have moved on and the shoes are left behind as an offering. Being flat footed and having trouble finding comfortable shoes, I metaphorically left a pair. I will be forever grateful to this weird city where most people are passionate about something and always said yes to getting a portrait made.
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Tammy Mercure is a State Guide to Tennessee. She was recently named one of the “100 under 100: The New Superstars of Southern Art” by Oxford American magazine.
Follow on Tumblr at tammymercure or on her website, TammyMercure.com. Support her work at TCB Press.
Great work, Tammy!
Fall Creek Falls under a fullmoon.
The three hardest tasks in the world are neither physical nor intellectual achievements, but moral acts: to return love for hate, to include the excluded, and to say, “I was wrong."
Sydney J. Harris
A still I pulled from the latest "Life in Motion" short I started editing yesterday. This was an especially fun shot to capture! A big thanks to @samfergusonkc10 @reidyoder21 and @sajferguson for making the filming possible.
I found a new project for @ellie_k_f !! Creating massive renderings for sets at the #barter
The Cumberland Plateau, Tennessee. #camping #fullmoon #eno #specialized #rockhopper #tennessee #rei
#shesaidyes