Monday, August 18, 2014

A Full Day of Exploring: Part I

This is what happens when your girlfriend wants to go on an adventure and your best friend has the day off of work; a couple hours of procrastination turns into a full day of exploring abandoned buildings. It went from 'let's get up early and explore a few buildings' to 'let's see how many we can explore in one day'. Well twelve hours and only one coffee later we had explored eleven abandoned buildings. Most of these buildings we had never been in before and even though I had forgotten my tripod plate (I always forget something) and had to shoot free hand all day, I think I ended up with a handful of solid photos. Thankfully the Mark III keeps the noise to a minimal even at high ISO.


First stop was an abandoned observatory. 






Second location was a factory that is full of garbage, household garbage, dumped illegally by garbage trucks. When it's hot out this building smells so bad of rotten trash. Kaylah and Brandon laugh at me for being so grossed out by this place, but seriously bacteria filled garbage water is everywhere. I've put my Palladium boots through a lot but I did my best to keep them out of that muck.







Cleveland's worst neighborhoods have the best abandoned buildings. Not sure what exactly this building was. A restaurant, apartments, and who knows what else. One thing is for sure, it's been abandoned for around forty years.




Brandon squeezing through a hole in the wall.



Our next stop was an auto parts supply store, which also housed apartments at one time.





I think it's important to explore and photograph places like these for so many reasons. First of all curiosity might have killed the cat, but I'm not a cat. As far as I'm concerned I think a little bit of curiosity is healthy. Too many people are happy being complacent and apathetic. Get out and discover something! Secondly, buildings like these are like an endangered species. These buildings tell the stories of our parents, grandparents, great grandparents, and their parents. This is where they worked, where they lived, and where they shopped. For an infinite number of reasons we leave these buildings to rot, choosing to ignore their history, and the beauty of their architecture; because it's easier and cheaper to build new buildings of plastic and cinder blocks devoid of aesthetic. These relics of the past need and deserve to be remembered and that's my goal when I'm out exploring. Preserve the past through my photos and memories.



Photos taken with a Canon Mark III, with a Canon 20mm f/2.8 lens.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

So Far This Week

So far this week I've shot a lot of miscellaneous photos, most of which don't justify a full blog post on their own so I thought I'd lump them all into one post. 


Kaylah and I went to Canton to check out this awesome abandoned UFO office building. I would love to get in here to take photos, and I would love even more to make it my house.




Stomped around some bad neighborhoods and abandoned buildings documenting all the graffiti we could find.



Woke up around 5:30 A.M. to drive to this beach and take sunrise photos with a power plant in the background.



Lasers shooting through downtown Cleveland.




Climbed a bridge I had never climbed before.



Also climbed an old wooden water tower on top of a building.






Photos taken with a Canon Mark III, and Canon 60D; with a Canon 20mm f/2.8, and Rokinon 8mm Fisheye lens.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Documenting Cleveland's Graffiti

One of the very first things I shot when I started taking photos was graffiti. I've always appreciated graffiti, not just it's aesthetic but also the way it simply appears over night, created by a society of faceless nocturnal beings. There are several popular walls in Cleveland, covered in perfect pieces of art, but my favorite aspect of graffiti has always been the bombing scene. Part of the fun of documenting graffiti is driving around trying to find it. We spent a good portion of the evening driving all over the city, starting on the West side and making our way East. This is just a small sample of what I shot. 


















It felt good to shoot graffiti again. I had kind of gotten out of the habit of photographing all the graffiti but I plan on doing a lot more of it in the near future.


Photos taken with a Canon Mark III, with a Canon 20mm f/2.8 and Canon 135mm f/2.0 lens.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Abandonment Issues vol. 005

I was hoping to get out and do more shooting this week but that didn't really happen. I did drop by a couple of my favorite abandoned buildings though. The first is a school, and the second is a Masonic temple. No matter how many times I visit these buildings, I always manage to find new shots and see things that I didn't see on previous trips.






A basement classroom.



Stairwell light painting in the Masonic Temple.



Clouded mirror photo of Kaylah and I.












Photos taken with a Canon Mark III, and Canon 60D; with a Canon 20mm f/2.8, and Rokinon 8mm Fisheye lens.