Northwest Community Hospital South Pavilion
April 11, 2010 by rusticroads
Northwest Community Hospital South Pavilion

Northwest Community Hospital South Pavilion

This is a photo I took Saturday, April 10, 2010 of Northwest Community Hospital’s new South Pavilion, opening soon.  I got up before 5AM to get their before sunrise, and I made it!  I had stopped by the previous day to take some preliminary pictures and scout it out.  As can be seen, everything worked out great!  That morning I took a fair number of images, in bracketed groups of three for conversion to HDR.  Knowing how to get there, where to park and what spots would probably yield good shots helped immensely!  I got what I needed in about a hour and a half.  This is an HDR image and probably the best work I’ve done in Photoshop.  These photos are for a contest they are having, so hopefully I’ll make some money on this!  This was not an easy shoot – there are really only a limited number of places to get a good angle, and very few where one can get a good overall shot, due to nearby buildings, the street, trees and whatnot in the way.  That’s where scouting really paid off – I knew these spots before I got there.  And I must say this image looks a lot better at full resolution – the lines are incredibly crisp, the colors gorgeous.  In short, I like this photograph!!  Too bad there’s not some leaves on that branch.  Not much I can do about that.

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One Old Farm – Staircase HDR
March 22, 2010 by rusticroads

We are doing a project for one of my classes – “The Dark Side” – taking photographs similar in tone to Film Noir.  After unsuccessfully attempting to photograph my cats using direct flash (they were uncooperative) I decided to use a series on doors from my One Old Farm Project.  This particular image caught my eye – it has a really freaky look to it.  This is an HDR composed of five images, converted to black and white.  For some reason it has a really dirty, ugly and scary look to it, I’m not sure why.  I’m new to HDR, I’ve only been working with PhotomatrixPro for about a week, although it’s easier than I thought.  However, the results for any series of exposures is unpredictable – some come out great, some are really weird and some just don’t work at all.  However, you will be seeing a lot more HDR in Rustic Road’s from now on!  I really like it when it works!!

One Old Farm - Staircase HDR

One Old Farm - Staircase HDR

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One Old Farm – Extended Photographic Project
February 18, 2010 by rusticroads
One Old Farm - Extended Project

One Old Farm - Extended Project

This project has separate objectives. From a cultural perspective it will include the documentation of an single old farmstead in rural Kane County, Illinois. This is of importance in a historical sense as this property will no doubt be developed in the future, probably in the near future – it is currently owned by a real estate company (Inland Real Estate Corporation, Oak Brook, Illinois), is located at the intersection of two major highways and is, in fact, within the boundaries of the Village of Sugar Grove. It is not currently for sale. So it is an opportunity to document a part of American History that is rapidly disappearing before the onslaught of suburbia. On the artistic level I envision this project as being a study in light, form and texture. This abandoned farmstead contains a house as well as two barns and other outbuildings in various states of decay. There are a wealth of possibilities for shooting form and texture both inside and out – weathered wood, pealing paint, heaps of rubbish and partially fallen down structures, all on a heavily wooded eleven acre plot. This will not be a bunch of rustic decaying barn photographs that are so popular today – in fact it would be impossible to get such typical quaint and romantic scenes at this location because of its situation in the center of a heavily wooded area. The primary inspiration for this project is Wright Morris, a photographer who traveled the country taking photographs of the rural Midwest between the mid-thirties and mid-fifties. He photographed what he saw then as a disappearing America. I have decided to take a slightly different angle, choosing to focus on one site – One Old Farm.

I conceive of this as being an ongoing project, continuing well beyond the class, for perhaps one year, in order to document this property in all seasons. The photographs will all be in black and white, probably a selection of 11×14 and 8×10 window mounted or possibly even framed prints. I believe that black and white will be better for the artistic study of light, form and texture while contributing to an “old time” or nostalgic feeling for something from the past that is rapidly disappearing. The number by the end of the semester will certainly be more that 10. I also plan of publishing these photographs (as well as many I don’t print) to a separate gallery on my web site, Rustic Roads Photography. Photographs will use natural light for the most part, however I may shoot at night using flash or experiment with painting with light to see if such techniques fit into the project. I will shoot digital for the most part but may also use black and white film, which I will develop and scan.

I plan on shooting at least once per week at different times of day and during various weather conditions (sun, overcast, night, rain, fog, etc). Photographs will be selected and edited (at least in rough form) as I go. I will contact the owners of the property to ask for permission, however as they are absentee landlords I doubt that they would ever know that I was there. This will be an ongoing project and the portion completed in class will be (late) Winter and Spring which will set the tone for the remainder of the project.

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Elevator, Big Rock Illinois
February 6, 2010 by rusticroads

I am currently working on a project for school, which will result in ten final prints at the end of the semester.  Today was my first day of shooting, and although it was cold and windy as hell I got some really good shots.  My theme will have something to due with rural Northern Illinois succumbing to the subdivision, or something like that.  Appropriate, as I live in the very western suburbs of Chicago and they are constantly putting up new subdivisions, huge farms of “McMansions” in the corn and soybean fields west of town.  Part of the project is simply photographing iconic rural Midwestern fixtures – as in the grain elevator here.  I also have to choose three photographers to “guide me” in this project – my primary choice, and the only one I’ve decided on for sure at this point, is Wright Morris.  He has a very famous photograph called “Gano” – a grain elevator he photographed in Kansas in 1946 or 47 (I think).  So this is my take on that – “Big Rock.”

Big Rock Elevator

Big Rock Elevator



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Cameron-Drummond-Slagsvold Building, Eau Claire, Wisconsin
February 5, 2010 by rusticroads

Cameron-Drummond-Slagsvold Building

Cameron-Drummond-Slagsvold Building

15-21 South Barstow, Eau Claire, Wisconsin.  1893-94, Romanesque Revival.  This is hands down my favorite public building in Eau Claire!  And it has a great club (The Stone’s Throw) to boot!!  This structure features massive rough stonework at the basement and first floor levels and red brick on the upper two floors.  Typical of this type of Victorian architecture are the round tower and decorative brickwork.  This is the largest building in the city remaining from this architectural period.  Local Landmark and National Register of Historic Places.  Photograph taken July, 2009.

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Aubrey Burl – Stonehenge’s Breton Connections
January 18, 2010 by rusticroads

Aubrey Burl – Stonehenge’s Breton Connections

Aubrey Burl was principal lecturer in archaeology, Hull College of Higher Education, East Riding of Yorkshire. He has published numerous books and articles on the subject of the various stone circles of the British Isles and especially on Stonehenge.

Burl has postulated two controversial theories concerning the construction of Stonehenge – one is that the bluestones were transported to the Salisbury Plain by the glaciers, as opposed to human transport from Wales; the other is that the persons who constructed Stonehenge were strongly influenced by the customs of Brittany, across the English Channel. (more…)

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United Methodist Church, Batavia Illinois
December 19, 2009 by rusticroads

Last night was a great night for shooting photographs – low clouds and snow made for great ambient light, and a light snow was falling.  Also, of course, everyone has their Christmas lights on.  So I decided to take a walk around the neighborhood, using my old 50mm f/1.4 Nikkor lens on my digital camera (due to the low light).  Just a block down the street from me is the Methodist Church, a great old building, but hard to shoot – primarily because it is so architecturally distinct that it clashes with the other buildings around it.  It’s hard to get a shot of the church without some other distracting architectural style in the photo.  To get this shot I stood on the porch of the Newton House (a Victorian directly across the street) and took three photos to make this photograph, which is technically a panorama of three landscape photographs arranged vertically.  Because of the darkness and shadows considerable work had to be done in photoshop to bring it all together, but here it is!

At the Batavia Methodist Church Website (which also has a cool 360 degree panorama of the Church sanctuary), I found this info: (more…)

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