Showing posts with label monochrome. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monochrome. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

A Sign Of Nostalgia At Haines Mill ...

“Color is descriptive. Black and white is interpretive.”

           ~ Elliott Erwitt

               ~ photographer

                ~ born 1928

The morning sun dapples around the Haines Bros. Flour Mill sign on the historic Haines Mill on a beautiful late October day in the Borough of Cetronia, Allentown, Pennsylvania in this high contrast monochrome shot.

 

Also known as Haines Mill Museum, it is an historic grist mill built circa 1850. It produced flour processed by an old-fashioned water-powered mill located just off the banks of the Cedar Creek. It remained in full operation until 1957.

 

A mill has stood here on the banks of the Cedar Creek since colonial times. The current circa 1850 Haines Mill offers a trip into the world of the early technology that supported farm life.

 

The sign on the front of the building says: “Haines Bros. Flour Mill, The Home of Gilt Edge Flour,” with a sack of flour etched with the words, “Cetronia Flour Mills, Gilt Edge Flour, 50 lbs. net, Allentown.”

 

It is a four-story, stone building with a slate covered gambrel roof. It is three bay by three bay, 42 feet by 46 feet, 9 inches. The interior was rebuilt after a disastrous fire in 1908. A three-story brick addition was built in 1930, with a lean-to roof. Atop the main roof is a cupola.

 

Today, Haines Mill is operated as a partnership between the County of Lehigh, which owns and maintains the site, and the Lehigh County Historical Society, which provides public tours. It is located in a serene 37.5 acre park.

 

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1981.


 

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

The Whitetails ...


“If you truly love nature, you will find beauty everywhere.”

                   ~ Vincent van Gogh

                          ~1853-1890


It’s always the sweetest sight of summer to see a white-tailed fawn, and to see two together is twice the joy!



I captured this high contrast monochrome shot of brother and sister twin white-spotted fawns with their mama doe on a gorgeous early September evening in the waning summer as sunset loomed at the park.



One of the fawns I call Buttons, as I photographed him since he was a precious fawn, then a sweet button buck and then a beautiful yearling until he migrated away in January 2020. Along the way I tossed him many apples, which he loved eating. His twin sister is with him in this image, though she was always a bit more shy about posing for the camera.



It’s a true joy and blessing to me personally and as a photographer to have watched these sweet fawns grow.