August 2009

Exploring The East Side

2 Comments

On one of the days while I was home, my mother took me to take photos of Buffalo’s East Side. In case anybody is wondering why on earth I’ve suddenly started taking a ridiculous amount of photos…. I’ve been amassing a collection of Buffalo-centric photos for a series of photomontages I’ll be displaying at a gallery this October. I plan on writing more about that soon, but if you want slightly more information, check out the gallery’s website.

Because the East Side is arguably one of the dodgiest areas in the city, my mother drove slowly through the streets so I could stop her when needed, scurry out of the car, take a photo, and get back in. The area is really quite romantic in a way. It has some really great old cottages and small, tree-lined brick streets. It’s a shame that it has sunk so deep into poverty, because with a little fixing up, it could be even more amazing than it already is.

Read More »

Grandpa’s

1 Comment

This is the house where my mother grew up. For the past several years, only my grandfather was living here until he passed away earlier this year. I took these photos in April and they’ve been gathering dust in my hard drive until recently. I’ve been in a really autobiographical mood lately and I’ve been unearthing old photographs and revisiting places of my childhood. My grandparents’ home stands today much as it has for the past forty years or so, a snapshot of life in the fifties and sixties. Everything in the house is wonderfully retro and it was difficult to not stay all day photographing each and every corner of it.

Read More »

Getting Kramped

1 Comment

Yesterday, I went back to Divine Finds to do a shoot with the lovely Shannon Kramp. Shannon lives not too far outside of Buffalo and has her own blog and clothing line called Kramp Kouture. I found shannon on the website Model Mayhem, something that is relatively new to me. If you’re a photographer looking for models or an aspiring model, I’d highly recommend the site. It’s a great way to network and get in touch with people who are interested in modeling/photographing within your community.

Read More »

Time Capsule

2 Comments

The New York Times wrote an article about Buffalo’s architecture last fall that said “one of the most cynical clichés in architecture is that poverty is good for preservation.” For Buffalo, at least, this statement couldn’t be more true and, really, it is one of the silver linings to Buffalo’s never-ending economic depression. My father took me on a little guided tour of some of Buffalo’s less frequented neighborhoods yesterday and I literally almost peed my pants with excitement as I was drawn into what felt like a time warp back to the 1950s. In most cities, the old hardware stores and supermarkets with hand-painted signs for soda pop would be bulldozed to make way for shiny glass condos and Whole Foods markets, but not in Buffalo! Here, these relics of the days of yore remain intact. A museum of sorts, except this one charges no admission fee and the downside is that the people populating this quaint scene are the real deal: people suffering from the city’s lack of adequate resources.

When I go around photographing these incredible neighborhoods, a few thoughts cross my mind. First, I think, Wow! These people are so lucky to live here! And with a pang of sadness and a little bit of guilt, I remind myself that it is because of bad things that the city remains this way. My photography excursions become almost like little missions as I frantically try to document the Buffalo that has been slowly changing in recent years. I know that as soon as the mom and pops that own the mom-and-pops shops pass away with old age, so too will the Buffalo that has remained relatively unchanged since the early twentieth century. There is already evidence of this happening. In recent years, Buffalo seems to have been on an upswing. New businesses and buildings are sprouting up all over the place and, while this is most definitely not a bad thing, it is definitely important to stop and consider our beloved and oftentimes forgotten history. Before we knock down the small cottages in the Old First Ward and replace them with the now ubiquitous glass apartment building, we need to consider the things that make our city unique. Somebody needs to take a sweeping hand and landmark the entire region before Buffalo becomes another faceless city without and identity.

Read More »

Hertel Avenue

0 Comments

Danielle over at Divine Finds was nice enough to let me and Jill play dress up with her fabulous vintage inventory today. The adorable shop is located on Hertel Avenue in North Buffalo, the perfect backdrop for our retro-style shoot. After I was done shooting, Jill took the opportunity to grab my camera and put me in front of it, too.

Read More »

Vermont Street

1 Comment

In a continuation of my Buffa-loving photoshoots, Kat and I went to the street I grew up on yesterday to take some pictures. I hadn’t been down that way for such a long time and it brought so many memories back. We photographed in front of the house I lived in until I was nine years old, we explored the weedy and cracked parking lot where I would play with huge gangs of neighborhood kids. So many things had changed in my old neighborhood, but so many things were exactly the same. The wood on the outside of the cottage I lived in was replaced with vinyl siding, the bodega a few blocks away has since been changed into an organic bakery. I had a huge debate with myself last night about whether or not I should use black and white or color versions of these photos. The black and whites were so beautiful, but I decided that ultimately, desaturating these photos would be a disservice to the awesome dress that Kat was wearing.

Read More »

Endless Summer

2 Comments

I’ve come back home to Buffalo until school starts to take photographs for an art show I’m having in October. For the last few days, I’ve been shooting more consistently than I have in years. I’m trying to create a mini collection of work that captures the feeling of growing up in my hometown. I wanted to capture the city streets, old houses, kids playing around, all that nostalgic stuff. These photoshoots are kind of bitter sweet because they might be the last that my sister and her friends do for me. In less than a week, they will all be off at college and on to bigger and better things. I’m frantically trying to fit in as much photographing as possible before they’re all too old and disinterested to model for me. For this shoot in particular, I told my sister that I would need a bunch of people and she took it upon herself to enlist a crop of brand new faces for the shoot. The photos were taken on Buffalo’s East Side.

Read More »

Hot and sticky and gross

1 Comment

If I ever complain about it being freezing in the winter, please tell me to shut up immediately and slap me across the face. I’ve come to the conclusion that it’s much better to be cold than hot. At least when it is so hot that you release two tons of sweat every time you move two inches and so humid that you feel like you’re walking in a lake. That’s how it has been for about the past two weeks. And I am so over it. Bring on the snow!

I don’t know what is wrong with my body, but I tend to perspire much more easily than other people. If I walk to the subway in this weather, by the time I arrive, my clothes are soaked, I’m literally dripping and my hair has started to disintegrate. And this is if I walk at a snail’s pace. If I’m in a hurry and have to run or bike, the image is much, much worse. Not only does it take my body much longer to cool down, but it will look is if I have just walked out of a shower and not bothered to dry off before putting clothes on. My face will be shiny with perspiration and my hair will look like a crying, dead wet dog.

This happened to me the other day when I went to meet up with some of my friends to go bar-hopping in Greenpoint. It was midnight, so I assumed that the temperature wouldn’t be as bad and I could bike to the subway station to save time. I was so wrong. By the time I got down into the suffocatingly hot, breezeless subway station, I could feel my clothing begin to stick to my body and my hair start to melt into dead-dog mode.

My friends had told me that they would meet me at their stop on the last subway car. I attempted to locate myself on the platform where I thought the last car would arrive, but I was also very wrong about that. For some reason, the G train has been running with an unusually large number of cars and where I thought the end car would stop, the middle car ended up. Somewhat aggravated in my post-perspiratory state, I boarded the middle car and tried to avoid attention as I unsuccessfully fanned my face with my hand.

At the Bedford-Nostrand stop, even before the train had stopped, I saw my three friends running past the window of my train to meet me in the last car. I thumped the window hard to try to catch their attention, but they no doubt couldn’t hear it above the din of the train. When the train stopped and the doors opened, I thrust myself onto the platform and ran like a sopping zombie towards the final car. “Blaaaaaaarrrrggg!!!” my sweaty, crazed self grunted as I hit the closing train doors and pounded on them. My friends looked up as the doors re-opened to reveal me standing there like a drowned rat. I boarded the train and tried in vain to look composed. “Look how wet I am!” I said, trying to laugh off my total mortification.

Needless to say, I was kind of a wreck the rest of the night. In addition to being a total hot mess, I was also a little bit loopy from doing the night shift at work a few times in the past week. Let me tell you, sleep deprivation and self-consciousness is not a good combination. It makes you do stupid things. Like not be able to read. Or walk smack-dead into screen doors and break them. Yes, I did that. And this was just after one beer.

So, I’m sure it’s pretty clear at this point that I am sick and tired of summer. I am sick of my towels not drying because of the humidity. I am sick of my air conditioner not even being enough to cool down my room. I am sick of arriving to work and having to blow-dry hair under the hand dryer before going up to the sales floor. Can it please be fall already?