Archive for the ‘Photography’ Category

Photos: Dead Horse Bay

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Dead Horse Bay, bones and plasticLast November my good pal Zach Zorich, an editor at Archaeology Magazine (and medium format fan), took a trip out to one of Brooklyn’s dirty secrets: Dead Horse Bay.

And by dirty, I do mean dirty. Sawed up horse bones, glass bottles, old shoes, decrepit toys and pretty much any trash you might expect prior to 1926. The history of this spot is pretty murky when it comes to information online, but Google has a nice history feature you can explore. Wikipedia’s article is surprisingly lacking.

Now, I love taking photos of trash. You can explore hard evidence of the existence of some civilization, be it old or recent.

And the trash speaks to you.

Trash tells you its story of abuse and neglect, survival and triumph because it is found. And though inanimate, trash is to a photographer is like a biologist is to wildlife: it is captured, logged and set back into its natural habitat.

Ok, I’ll shut up now. Enjoy the photos, if trash is your thing.

I lied.  Don’t miss my related “trashy” set of Floyd Bennett Field, right next door to Dead Horse Bay.

Now enjoy.

Trekkin’ across the Ukraine

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

Dave Mosher's Ukraine 2009 Flickr galleryTo take a break from science for a moment, and touch on the exploratory elements of being a Cosmopolitanaut, I want to share something my world-traveling brother James has put together.

Last June (that’s June 2009 for the archivists), I hopped on a 10-hour flight out to Ukraine to visit James, who was wrapping up his two-year commitment to the Peace Corps.

Call it ultra-busyness or laziness, but I haven’t managed to get around to hashing out a proper account of what that trip was like. Some day, some day…

I could say things like: amazing, eye-opening, entertaining, exhausting, frustrating (damn you Ukrainian hiking trails), humbling, stunning, etc., but they have no context.

Thankfully, James has created that context for us all. He also happens to be a fantastic storyteller/writer, so don’t miss his three posts about our journey across the country at his visually rich blog, inconsistenc: (more…)

TV/Computer Screen Science – Part 1

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Look at you, just looking at that cool flat screen of yours, reading this blog post.

Yes, you — who else?

Think about this: Pieces of light are shooting out of that screen, slowing down as they hit your eyeglasses/contacts/cornea/lens/vitreous humor, and ending their short-lived existence on a suicide mission into your retinal rod and cone cells — which create electrical signals that travel through your optic nerve and into your fleshy computer to comprehend this text.

Mind-blowing run-on sentences aside, what they heck are you really looking at? Where is that light really coming from? What is the material responsible in the screen? How does it all work? What is the meaning of life?

Let’s find out! But first, a fun guessing game. (more…)