28 September 2013

Volatile foliage


 Dee Overly



 ialvarez15



 Jamey Lee Balester Lopez 



 Jeff Brown



 Kevin Callahan



 kickassconnor



 MeganMLEE15



 Melissa Baccus



 Peter Moberg



 rain__child



 Rose Welty



Sigrid Frensen

23 September 2013

Food or sex or both


A Fleeting Feeling of Delight -Etsy-


Educated in the backyard school of photography and largely self-taught, Robert Bridges is a wise contemplative man living in Hesperus, Colorado, US.

The following is a short statement about him. 

« I have over 30 years of photographic experience and I approach photography as a sacred art grounded in the practices of mindfulness and meditation. I create images using in-camera multiple exposures. This technique allows for a recording of reality that is impressionistic, soft, abstract, and invites the dynamics of movement, light, chance, and time. 

We are all flowers flowering in a blooming universe.»

– Robert Bridges



 [Against a Backdrop of Golden Light] -Etsy-


 Community -Etsy-


 [Double Take] -Etsy-


 [Food or Sex or Both] -Etsy-


 It Was Good for Me -Etsy-


 Just Lighten Up -Etsy-


 [Just Some Ordinary Miniature Tulips] -Etsy-


 [Kneeling in Rich Mud] -Etsy-


 Midnight Rider -Etsy-


 Mirror Mine -Etsy-


[My Work on That Day] -Etsy-


« I try to use the camera as a means of cultivating the qualities of curiosity, playfulness, concentration, mindfulness, gratitude, serenity and joy. Remembering that each time one picks up the camera an opportunity arises to see the world with fresh eyes. 

Contemplation is a practice of simply being attentive, receptive, inquisitive and, ultimately, joyful. The object of contemplation can be anything. The subject does not matter but the practice of opening oneself does.

The imagery I create arises from a space of not knowing. A quality of mind sometimes described as beginner’s mind or wu-wei, in which the mind is silent and the art expresses itself. […]

Chado, the way of tea; shodo, the way of the brush; kyudo, the way of the bow; and kado, the way of the flower.

My path appears to be the way of the flower.»


– Robert Bridges







[On a Still Point] -Etsy-


A few words about the photograph titles. Titles in bold are from Robert Bridges. The others are mine, I mean Robert Bridges didn't give the artwork a name and the words in square brackets are excerpts I chose from the text describing the photo.



Portal -Etsy-


« I am struck by how true it is that learning to use a camera changes the way one perceives the world.»

– Robert Bridges


19 September 2013

Facing equinox

Just a liiiiittle bit season-disoriented, these furry magnolia buds might bring to the last days of the summer the fresh iconic breeze of a next spring.



 ©BlueRidgeKitties [flickr]



 ©GabiV hopeful [flickr]



 ©innerMt [flickr]



 ©Jay D. [flickr]



 ©Jeremy jayharp79 [flickr]



 ©Jo Jones [flickr]



 ©klusf [flickr]



 ©Lisa Sheirer [flickr]



 ©mariegradypalcic [etsy]



 ©Miriam Poling [flickr]



 ©Paul Cooper [flickr]



 ©phoebedslr [flickr]



 ©Robert Ullmann [flickr]



©WestLothian [flickr]


Magnolia is an ancient genus. Having evolved before bees appeared, the flowers developed to encourage pollination by beetles. As a result, the carpels of Magnolia flowers are tough, to avoid damage by eating and crawling beetles. Fossilized specimens of M. acuminata have been found dating to 20 million years ago, and of plants identifiably belonging to the Magnoliaceae dating back to 95 million years ago. Another primitive aspect of Magnolias is their lack of distinct sepals or petals. The term tepal has been coined to refer to the intermediate element that Magnolia has instead. @Edwards Gardens - Toronto