What Mister Kodak Saw

Here I have a selection of snapshots from yesterday. My photography experience from college left me with the conviction that unless an image is part of the means to a design end, cropping is for the inexperienced, the hurried and the unimaginative: my pictoral decisions are made through the viewfinder instead of at the enlarger. With that in mind, the Kodak's tiny lens compressed nearly every wide-angle opportunity I spied from the passenger seat. The curvature of the cabin of my parent's minivan only complicated matters, so I had to wait until I was right on top of a subject. It took some adjustment. And convenience aside, two megapixels are two megapixels - and the computer I'm using is without appropriate touch-up software. So we have our caveats; now a few sights from the trip to Maryland.

«     »