sjfphotography: *fine art images *natural light portraits *greeting cards


Thursday, March 27, 2014

rubber duckies
 
These floating props in the "Duck Pond" carnival game looked a little sad.  Probably had lots of nautical miles behind them.  Photoshop perked them up and then they became eerily other-worldly.  I didn't pay my money at this game of chance; photography is enough of a risk.
 
McAllen, Texas
3.25.2014

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Feliciano
 
Our delightful waiter this evening was Feliciano.  When I asked like Jose Feliciano, he replied "light my fire."  I'm not sure he was around to hear that hit tune in 1968 but I'm sure he's used the reference frequently.
 
McAllen, Texss


Tuesday, March 25, 2014

sideshow
 
On my visit to the Rio Grande Valley, I anticipated blue skies and palms.  The reality is dreary clouds, drizzle and temperature in the 60s.  The weather is reflected in the attendance of the carnival that was happening beside the freeway.  The hawker is reading his newspaper and I'm the only one interested in the two-headed cow, five-legged dog, elephant woman, mermaid and other freaks of nature.  Supposedly in years past, the John Strong Strangest Show on Earth was a feature on Coney Island but packed tents and left.  It's a "fur piece" from Coney Island to the vacant lot in McAllen, Texas.  However it appears John Strong's banners made the trip.  One reviewer called them "gorgeous in a retro sort of way." Strong’s banners were painted by Jorge Rivero and Coney Island’s Takeshi Yamada, who also operated a freak  show.  Visit Sideshowworld for more information to this disappearing art form.
 
McAllen, Texas

Monday, March 24, 2014

no hunting
 
The "no hunting" sign is ironic since I drive the countryside hunting for old barns and structures like this.
 
FM 1075
Swisher County, Texas
3.14.2014

Sunday, March 23, 2014

garage sale
 
If you are thinking about advertising your garage sale or lost dog, telephone poles on city corners are handy.  This one at 46th and University has displayed its share -- at least on the south side.  One thing you should know is that City of Lubbock Ordinance 7084 Section 40.01.003(73) prohibits signs of any kind (including garage sale signs) on utility poles. Lubbock citizens are law-abiding.

Saturday, March 22, 2014

if walls could talk
 
Vendors at the antique mall pound nails and hang their wares, probably unknowingly, on historic walls.  Grand Central Station does business in a former bowling alley where supposedly Buddy Holly and Mac Davis bowled.  The "antiques" sign outside is imposed on the gigantic bowling pin that marks the location.  When the bowling alley closed, the lanes and equipment were shipped to China.  However, the murals, painted in the 1940s by an itinerant artist who had worked for Disney, are still evident -- although faded and pockmarked by nail holes.  This "almost" representation of Monticello is on the north wall; the south wall has fanciful creatures reminiscent of Disney characters.  When you visit the antique mall, be sure to stop by Abbeville Antiques to see what my friends Don and Sally have that you can't live without!
 
Grand Central Station Antiques
4020 Avenue Q
Lubbock, Texas
 
 


Friday, March 21, 2014


What is it with the propensity to perch automobiles atop things?  Not long ago, in Floydada, I spotted a 1965 Triumph on a hill of dirt.  Today it was a Volkswagen on a pole.  That actually makes some sense as advertising for wrecking yard, although it also seems a popular pigeon roost.  And, in Lamesa, the 1955 Cadillac on the brick building that used to be the Country Store was a great "come-on."  But the Chevy Cavalier on top of a semi-trailer on a backlot in Claude?  No idea.  Evidently elevating automobiles is a fairly widespread occurrence.  The blog artcarcentral has a whole category dedicated to "cars on poles."
 
 

AAA Wrecking
4509 E. 4th Street
Lubbock, Texas
 
 

1955 Cadillac Hard-top Coupe
603 S. Lynn
Lamesa, Texas
 

Chevy Cavalier
Claude, Texas


Thursday, March 20, 2014

vestibule of hell
 
In the Inferno, before entering the Nine Gates of Hell, Dante and Virgil pass through an anteroom referred to as the "vestibule of hell" where they read on the portal "abandon hope all ye who enter here."  This sad building in Swisher Country (March 15, 2014) has a screened anteroom before the single large room.  The door has been reinforced with bathroom tile board, the curtains are tattered and the floor littered with broken glass and droppings.  Those who left here must have abandoned all hope as well.  (You probably didn't realize my background included a degree in English!)
 
FM 1424 north of Road G
Swisher County, Texas
3.14.2014
 
 

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

no, plywood
 
Wonder why a business whose primary product is steel would use plywood for their sign?  And not even keep it painted?  I do.
 
Levelland Steel Distributors
1st and Avenue K
Levelland, Texas

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

happy 90th birthday pop
 
 


Monday, March 17, 2014

one-eyed clara
 
McDonalds Birthday Party
Lubbock, Texas
3.16.2014


Sunday, March 16, 2014

party hearty
 
We celebrated Pop's 90th birthday at McDonalds.  The entertaining floor show was watching the great-grandkids play.  Everyone had fun - especially 14-month old Collier who is newly mobile.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

off the beaten path
 
Abandoned buildings with lost hopes are found throughout the plains.  Generally you can determine their function -- house, barn, school or church.  This structure has me puzzled because it doesn't seem to fit those categories.  I am guessing it was a store -- out in the middle of nowhere.  It's one-room, with double door and large front windows.  There is a kitchen in the rear with a counter separating it from the rest of the space.  Beside the building are two large areas, curbed with concrete.  No sign, no clue -- just a building hiding behind a hedge of evergreens.  Shotgun shells and empty casings show hunters have wandered by.  And the mattress?  Not a clue but it appears to be recently deposited and I wasn't touching it with a ten-foot pole!
 
FM 1424 north of Road G
Swisher County, Texas
3.14.2014
 
 
 



Friday, March 14, 2014

cowboy up
 
According to the Tex Randall story, everyone remembers the first time they saw him.  Well, today was my first time seeing him.  He's been in Canyon since 1959 but during my college days there I must have been in a daze!  This 47-foot cowboy started out as an attention-getter for a local western store but time has taken its toll.  One eye is gone, the cigarette in his hand was replaced by a spur and he no longer wears real denim jeans.  You can "cowboy up" and contribute to save this roadside attraction.
 
Tex Randall
Canyon, Texas
 

Thursday, March 13, 2014

wide open spaces
 
Route 207 from Silverton to Claude is scenic, going through Palo Dura Canyon, but there's not much to see.  Texas Highway 86 is 149 miles long -- from Bovina to Estelline.  You'll drive a ways on it going to Clarendon.  And you'll have time to ponder why the rancher/farmer named his place "Shinbone."
 
Highway 86 east of Claude, Texas
2.21.2014
 
 

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

out to pasture
 
Both the barn with its leaning stance and peeling paint and the horses with bony haunches and visible ribs have seen better days.  Founded in 1880, Benson  was as a stopping point for the Butterfield Overland Stage mail delivery route.  The stage robbery on the Benson-Tombstone Stage Route in 1881 took the life of stagecoach driver Bud Philpot and became one of the events that led to the Earp-Clanton gunfight at the O.K. Corral in nearby Tombstone.
 
Benson, Arizona
2.28.2014

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

love 
 
Baby-to-be became Blakely Addison.
March 10, 2014

Monday, March 10, 2014

first baby
 
Blakely was born March 10, 2014.

Sunday, March 9, 2014

kendall
 

The pink rhinestone tiara on Princess Kendall's headband is apropos.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

country road
County Road 3600 through Yellow House Canyon is a scenic drive -- in all seasons.  It looks quite different from the usual Lubbock aspect.  A flock of turkeys crossed the road in front of me.  It's best to start in Slaton on Railroad Avenue.  At the feed store, turn north and cross the tracks.  After a few miles of flat farmland, the vista of the canyon appears.