Single Passenger
Just one (bundled) person braves the January cold of the uncovered portion of the tour boat.
Just one (bundled) person braves the January cold of the uncovered portion of the tour boat.
On the west side of Owen Sound’s harbour.
More of one of the vintage trucks in Toronto’s Distillery District. See more from the Distillery District series.
A woman leaves the Migowi Healthy Center with her child in tow, in the Phalombe District of Malawi.
Looking down on an empty plaza, from the top of the Centre Pompidou.
On the streets of Lyon.
Along a canal near Centraal Station.
Just before the closing of the subway doors, at a station on the Bloor-Danforth line.
From the Pont des Arts, looking south, the Bibliothèque Mazarine. Established in 1643 by the physician Naudé and named for the Cardinal, France’s first public library contained nearly 40,000 items by 1652.
On the top floor landing.
From my series of night shots on the empty streets of Lyon.
Great varieties of brick along the walls of the Distillery District shops.
I don’t know what this might have once controlled, but I imagine it had to do with dumping massive amounts of grain into the trucks and gravity boxes…
Near the bus station, just a few steps from where Stairs and Dumpster was shot.
Sunset in the grain loading area at the Owen Sound elevators.
People traffic at the Budapest-Nyugati train station, opened in 1877 and built by the Eiffel Company.
Near my hotel.
I recognized the location. I had stumbled onto a photo taken on this street, a portrait, against the wall between the windows on the left, and I knew exactly where it was taken. So I dug into the archive and found this from 2008.
Six months ago today I began this post-a-day photoblog project. Reflecting back from the halfway mark, it has been challenging and fun, and has forced me to sharpen the critical eye I cast upon my work.
Entering the west side of Museum Station.
From an eastbound streetcar, taken just a few minutes after Biker on King.
Near the bus station in Karlovy Vary.
One of the Bouquinistes at his stall. Since the 1500’s, these sellers of antique and used books (and more) have lined the bridges and quays of the Seine. They’re…
At a station along the Bloor line.
From the taxi window on my way to the Ministry of Health office.
The Cherry Street Bridge, opened in 1931 and officially known as Cherry Street Strauss Trunnion Bascule Bridge. But less well-known is that it was designed by Joseph Strauss, designer…
Near the river in Lyon, around midnight.
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