Nature

A Year Later.

  A little over a year ago, I spent my spring break at home in Blacksburg. I was borrowing a friend's camera and got the chance to experience medium format film for the first time. I immediately fell in love with it.

  There is something about using a film camera that digital doesn't quite touch. Using a film camera, there is no chance to view your images right after you've taken them.  And, unlike digital cameras, film captures the image onto a physical surface.  There isn't just a file, but a physical record.  There's a permanence that isn't achieved in the digital realm.

  Anyway. Obviously, I love working with film.  But as for my time in Blacksburg, this is more of how I know Blacksburg to be.  It's not Virginia Tech or the tiny downtown that is quite literally two blocks, maybe three, depending on how you count them.

  My cousin, Ashley, is an experienced horseback rider, entering rodeos throughout high school, and eventually becoming the Virginia High School Rodeo Queen.  It's a big deal, if you're not familiar with the sport.

  Sprawling fields, backwoods trail rides, motocross, ATVs, were all the norm growing up.  I may have moved away from the area, but things are still similar to how they used to be. I spent a couple of days with Ashley and her mother.  They'd just gotten back from a rodeo the day before, but the trailer was a mess, and the horses needed a workout.

Trampoline Trees.

  I was having a heart to heart with one of my friends as we were out on the trampoline in the backyard.  It was late, probably 11:30pm or so, and the night sky was covered in clouds.  Not a star in sight.  Fairfax, being as busy as it is, never quite goes dark.  The lights from the surrounding buildings were lighting up the sky to an interesting red/yellowish kind of color.  I thought it looked better in black and white, though.

  Night photography requires long exposures, and there I was, laying on the trampoline with no tripod.  What was a girl to do? I plastered the camera to my face, held my breath, and hoped for a decent photo.