It is solved by walking…
“Solvitur ambulando.” ~St. Jerome This quote was on Steve McCurry’s blog a few weeks ago. It embodies my experience in most cities. Especially when traveling alone, I walk. I walk…
“Solvitur ambulando.” ~St. Jerome This quote was on Steve McCurry’s blog a few weeks ago. It embodies my experience in most cities. Especially when traveling alone, I walk. I walk…
Is it possible to sum up a place? These are the photos from one day in Venice: 8:27am – 8:52pm. . . . Venice. As the tours pour in, people…
Through you window That’s one way to see the world Step outside and look back into Look and listen And you decide what to believe Shine your light while you…
“The health of the eye seems to demand a horizon. We are never tired, so long as we can see far enough.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson It is only natural to…
Egypt is easy to misunderstand. Even the geography is inverted. The Nile runs south to north, so down is up and up is down. The events of these photographs will…
The day starts in Greece… …and ends in Egypt. Definitely stay tuned… -Noah D. . Other photographer friends posting a photo a day for 2013: Jeff Montgomery Mike James Ashel…
I absolutely love the color of the first photograph. As usual, whenever color is used in this blog, it’s natural color. And the black and white isn’t too processed.…
It is the natural tendency of a photojournalist to forget to explore his own world. He delves into the realm of the “others” so much that he forgets to pull…
While driving to church each Sunday morning when I was growing up, there was a radio host on the local radio station who would play southern gospel music. It wasn’t…
The year 2013 will be the first since 1987 to have no duplicate digits. Just saying… But 2012 was a pretty good year, double digits and all. It really was.…
Dinah is my sister’s cat. Dinah was Alice’s cat. I guess no rabbit holes for this one… Stay tuned… -Noah D.
Something that everyone expects from the photojournalism life is constant travel, exotic locations, and fascinating people. Imagine my surprise when I realized, only after a short time “in the field”…