Weston's 1939 image of stacked manikins gains meaning in retrospect , or foreshadowing.
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Weston's 1939 image of stacked manikins gains meaning in retrospect , or foreshadowing.
Thursday evening. Sand Road, east of Pullman, WA.
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Olympus Pen F / Panasonic-Leica 15mm f/1.7 / 1/4000 at f/5.6 ISO 200
I almost expect to see a tornado funnel in there.
This shot is near Pullman when I passed through the area in 2013. Ripples from the great Missoula Flood I guess.
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Palouse Area, WA by tuco, on Flickr
Nice--the strong contrast and hard light suits the subject.
Funnel clouds, fortunately, are extremely rare around here--full blown tornados, never, AFAIK. There's not much post-processing on that shot--it really did look like that--but the weather was actually pretty calm. This was about 6pm, after a day of rain.
Actually (puts on pedant hat) the Palouse rolling hills are wind-blown loess that predates the Missoula Floods, drifted over 2 million year old Columbia basalt as thick as 250 feet in places. If you look at satellite images, you can clearly see how prevailing winds out of the SW shaped the hills. When the Floods ripped through during the last Ice Age, the hills were stripped back down to basalt, resulting in the Channeled Scablands, suitable for ranching but you can't grow much on it. Great examples of Scablands around Washtucna, WA (with Palouse Falls nearby), and running north up towards Grand Coulee Dam. Dry Falls is another well-known flood feature (close pedantry).
The west side often gets the scenic love in our state (for obvious reasons), but as you probably noticed, I'm kind of a fanboy for the east side.
Really nice shot tuco.
Paddling the Pascagoula River
Mississippi Gulf Coast Community College
Widelux F7, Fuji C200
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http://vintagephoto.tv/temp/UnionStation5PM.jpg
Continuing with the train/transit/station theme...