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obsessed with the angel hologram on the Lazaretto vinyl.

vintage milk glass candleholders

Last Friday I got a chance to reshoot the Pier 94 site I had visited week or so ago. In that original session I had struggled a bit with cloudy skies, inconsistent and turbulent winds, and a couple of suboptimal camera settings (e.g., lens wide open and thus soft in the corners).

 

This session found sunny skies, a lower tide, and a breeze that was still problematically variable but not to the extent of the 4 August session. The photo yield was much improved.

 

Subject description from the previous set:

 

Up until the late 19th Century the Islais Creek basin on San Francisco’s southern coast was an impressive tidal marsh. Then the exuberant application of explosives, steam, and later diesel power filled the marsh to create district of industrial works.

 

In the current day there is little to recognize of the former wetlands. The Islais Creek channel is still there in a formal, channelized way. Here and there you can find small patches of long neglected shoreline where nature has managed to soften the industrial vocabulary of the landscape. One example is Heron’s Head Park, which we documented earlier in the Hidden Ecologies project. On Saturday I visited another bit of the shore right at the outlet of Islais Creek. This is a site called Pier 94 where the Golden Gate Audubon Society is managing a small plot of land to provide habitat for wildlife and waterfront access for humans.

 

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Pendolino 94 Kuopiosta Helsinkiin Jyväskylässä.

嫁も姑も皆幽霊

Vuelta casa. Agradecimientos por ambos lados. Cuaderno Musgo que se va llenando de amor y gente maravillosa! (www.musgo.net/)

aspen, colorado

1977

 

grassroots telethon 12

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Last Friday I got a chance to reshoot the Pier 94 site I had visited week or so ago. In that original session I had struggled a bit with cloudy skies, inconsistent and turbulent winds, and a couple of suboptimal camera settings (e.g., lens wide open and thus soft in the corners).

 

This session found sunny skies, a lower tide, and a breeze that was still problematically variable but not to the extent of the 4 August session. The photo yield was much improved.

 

Subject description from the previous set:

 

Up until the late 19th Century the Islais Creek basin on San Francisco’s southern coast was an impressive tidal marsh. Then the exuberant application of explosives, steam, and later diesel power filled the marsh to create district of industrial works.

 

In the current day there is little to recognize of the former wetlands. The Islais Creek channel is still there in a formal, channelized way. Here and there you can find small patches of long neglected shoreline where nature has managed to soften the industrial vocabulary of the landscape. One example is Heron’s Head Park, which we documented earlier in the Hidden Ecologies project. On Saturday I visited another bit of the shore right at the outlet of Islais Creek. This is a site called Pier 94 where the Golden Gate Audubon Society is managing a small plot of land to provide habitat for wildlife and waterfront access for humans.

 

Dayton District Chief, Dayton Ladder 111 and Kettering Medic 34 staffing Station #94 so members can attended the viewing of Battalion Chief Terry Overman. 5/26/2021

aspen, colorado

1977

 

aspen mountain

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Regalo. En plan de revivir el balcón, llegó el regalo de cumpleaños de Natalia: una maceta pintada zhostovo style :)

aspen, colorado

1977

 

aspen mountain

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Local produce sign. The Van Order family grows produce on their farm near Hardin for their family's use and for sale to the community through a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA), the local farmer's market, the farm to school program, and a local lodge. The Van Orders are dedicated to growing healthy, nutritious food using the soil health principles. The high tunnel helps them to extend the growing season, which allows for growing more diverse crops for a longer time. Van Order family's Living Root Farm. Hardin, MT. June 2022

 

Bus GNC 1373 94 Circular Cornellà 2/ GNC bus 1373 94 Circular Cornellà 2

This bus was new to Lothian Buses as 94 in 2003.

Seen here at Fort Kinnard

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