This original print, along with many others, is now for sale on my Etsy.
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This original print, along with many others, is now for sale on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, broom, childhood, children, dance, dancer, dancing, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, humor, kitsch, life, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Available with many other prints on my Etsy here.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged art, beauty, childhood, children, couples, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, humor, kitsch, life, love, marriage, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
This piece, along with many others, is available on my Etsy HERE.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1960s, all dressed up, art, beauty, couples, date night, dating, dennis finocchiaro, entertainment, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, kitsch, life, love, marriage, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, romance, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Alice got home from work and pulled out the vintage Polaroid camera she’d
discovered at a yard sale fully loaded, an unlikely find. She took out a small cloth and cleaned the lens, then reread the directions posted on the back of the camera itself. She was ready.
She threw on a cardigan in case it got chilly as evening approached and walked to the door to look at the world through the camera. She moved it from one spot to another with a heavy sigh. After a moment she went outside to walk around and find some photo opportunities.
Wandering around her neighborhood was admittedly not the way to find great shots, but none of her friends would pose for her. If she were honest with herself, she would realize that she wasn’t really close to any of them.
The camera was exciting, but the prospect of taking photographs of flowers and trash on the road and trees and cars didn’t really feel like the ultimate use of this rare and almost magical ancient film. She wanted to capture the image of a person. To know the feeling of posing them just right followed by the satisfaction of hearing the click of the shutter.
This was the first time Alice realized that she was alone. No boyfriend. No best friend. A few acquaintances who never called her; she was always the one dialing them, asking them to go out, and then hitting end after they declined.
She walked down the empty street, dragging her hand along a chain link fence, and looked from house to house, car to
car, nobody to be found. She headed for the playground in the hopes that some parent would be there pushing their child on a swing, or teaching them to ride a bike. But when she got there she realized it wasn’t right. She relaxed on a bench and watched some kids play on the nearby jungle gym.
She moved to the swingset and let the Polaroid rest on her lap, her free hand holding the chain, resting her head against the cold metal chain.



Photographs taken by me of model/makeup artist Sarah Maccarelli, whose work can be seen here. She was great to work with and was quite the actress, considering how happy and friendly she was.
Posted in flash fiction
Tagged alone, art, beauty, depression, fiction, flash fiction, found photograph, friends, friendship, kitsch, life, loneliness, lonely, love, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, polaroid, relationships, sad, vintage, writing
The men all sat to one side, dressed much more casual than their female counterparts, avoiding the talk of new clothing lines and the coupon section of the newspaper.
None of them knew each other, but this was to their liking more than taking part in a garden party. They talked of manly topics such as the new Ford, baseball and work. One of them, a car salesman, tried to convince them they all needed the ’44 that was coming in next week. Another, a soldier on leave, spoke of the war and regaled them with bloody stories full of bullets and bombs and explosions.
They watched from afar as their lady folk drank tea from fancy little cups and ate tiny desserts squeezed between their fingers.
Both sides checked on each other here and there. A husband nodded to his wife from across the ornate garden. A wife smiled and raised a teacup to her husband or pointed out a fancy statue of a cherub. One young woman had a camera and shot a photograph of her husband, the soldier.
It was like a school dance, but they were adults, at a garden party.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, cars, cherub, couples, dating, family, fancy tea party, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, garden, husbands, life, love, marriage, people, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, romance, soldier, tea, vintage, war, wives, writing
This original and many others are now for sale on my Etsy.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1960s, art, death, effects of war, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, life, love, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, relationships, sad, typewriter, typography, vintage, war, writing

The original prints of Out of State Love and many others are for sale now on my Etsy. Please check it out and share it with friends!
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, 1950s, 1960s, admission of love, art, beauty, bridge, couples, dating, Etsy, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, friendship, go to her, kitsch, life, long distance relationship, love, marriage, original print, photo, photograph, photography, photos, pictures, poetry, reading, relationships, romance, states, typewriter, typography, vintage, writing
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1940s, art, beauty, cabin, childhood, dare, deck, family, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, friends, humor, kitsch, lake, life, media, people, photo, photography, relationships, retro, summer, typewriter, typography, vacation, vintage
He woke up that morning and knew, just inexplicably knew he was supposed to get into his car and drive. So he threw a dirty pair of jeans on over his boxers, an old orange t-shirt, and got into his cherry red Camaro.
He turned the key, revved the engine, and then pulled out, no clue where he was going. How would he decide? Would the car know? Would fate just guide him? He pulled the car out and a sudden honk made him jump, a passing car with a driver waving a fist at him as it passed. He would have to be a bit more careful.
He pulled off of his street, and knew there was nothing in this small Pennsylvania town that would draw him out with such mystery and magic, so he headed right for the interstate, somehow fully aware that he had a long way to go, even though he had no real destination. It was only a few minutes before he was driving on the highway, accompanied by only one other car, a blue Ford truck, about a mile ahead of him. He drove until even the Ford was gone, and he was alone on the highway, not an oddity for this area at this time of day. The sun had only been up for moments, and after all, it was a Sunday, most people were still asleep. He looked up at the sun, wondering when the last time it was that he woke up this early any day of the week let alone a Sunday.
He saw an exit coming up, an unmarked one he’d never noticed before, and decided to turn off the interstate, this particular road made of dirt and pebbles, probably a truck exit or something, he figured. The sun almost disappeared, the trees were so thick here, and as he continued down the road, if it could even be called that, he was jostled all over the front seat due to its giant potholes and general unevenness. Something darted out in front of the car, a white blur, and so he slammed on the brakes.
Peeking over the dashboard, he turned off the radio, trying to see what it was that he’d quite possibly killed. Seeing nothing, he got out and walked around to the front. Lodged under the front tired was a large piece of paper, a map, most likely, so he got back in, backed the Camaro up a bit, then had to jump out and retrieve the paper as the wind took it again.
He chased it into the woods a bit, finally catching up with it as it was momentarily caught by a tree branch, snatching it up quickly before the wind could take it again. He gently opened it, since it seemed old, and realized it was covered in writing.
As he read it, he became overwhelmed, spellbound, excited. He could feel the world spinning, actually sense the movement under him, and he could see and hear every leaf in the woods move, every single little motion, he could hear the thoughts of a nearby bird searching out food for her babies, she seemed so scattered in her thoughts. He suddenly knew, without a doubt, that down the road was a cabin where a family was just getting up to the smell of bacon and eggs, and farther than that a deer was eating a sapling, and a bit down from that a river ran where a bear was trying to catch a fish, and he was even fully aware that today, that bear would not catch that fish, and the fish would go on to have many children, but that the bear would not.
He couldn’t even fully understand what it was that he was reading, but he could see himself, fifty years down the road, a grandson on his lap, his wife, whom he recognized as a neighbor of his, cooking in the kitchen as his family, and some of hers, prepared for some sort of celebration. He saw beyond that, wars, famines, tragedies, all in the future, he saw planes fall, men walking on Mars, tidal waves, love, he saw everything that would ever happen, understood it all, and suddenly realized what was happening. He continued to read, and the longer he read, the more of the world he saw, and he wanted to stop but could not, he wanted to know it all before this moment went away, before whatever was happening stopped, he had to know. He saw cities grow and change, buildings stretch higher, airplanes bigger, cars smaller, flying machines, floating buildings, crime, weapons beyond anything he ever knew could exist, and then, all of a sudden, he saw nothing.
He startled back to the woods at a nearby sound, and noticed a deer crashing through the woods, the same deer he’d seen eating only a moment, or maybe it was a day, a week, a month ago, he couldn’t tell. He looked around, remembered where he was, when he was, and headed back to the car. As he climbed back in, he suddenly remembered the paper in his hand, held it up in the air, and just let it go. The wind took it off in an instant, and he watched as it floated up into the air, back down, and then into the woods and out of his sight.
Posted in photos of strangers
Tagged 1970s, bear, cabin, Camaro, deer, fate, fiction, flash fiction, found art, found photograph, future, hunch, inspiration, kairos, knowledge, photography, science fiction, woods
As far back as I can remember my grandmother reminisced about her days on stage back in the Vaudeville era. Her and my grandfather were well known, in New York at least, as performers of music, dance, and probably even more so, comedy.
Grandfather, before he died, swore he’d made up Groucho’s famous “Outside of a book, a dog is a man’s best friend. Inside a dog it’s too dark to read,” line back then on the stage. It’s true, Groucho did attend one of their performances with his brothers, but regardless, there’s no way to prove that claim.
When I was little I would spend summers at my grandparents home in suburban New York, a small property that working the stage had paid for. Mother considered it an extended visit, a vacation. I loved it. Dad, eternally disliked by my grandmother for pulling my mom out of the spotlight and marrying her, hated every moment. Using work as an excuse, he would drive up from Philadelphia, our hometown, on weekends.
As I got older, after grandfather died, our visits were really all my grandmother looked forward to. She would have my room all done up with a frilly pink bedspread (something I pretended to love even after I’d outgrown it) and would serve all of my favorite meals. She would cater to anything I wanted as if I were her own daughter. Actually, even mom didn’t have it as good as I did in that old house.
And every summer, like clockwork, she would pull out her old prop umbrella, worn out and missing the knob, and we would do one of the skits she loved so much with me playing the straight man. She’d put on a funny hat and dress and jump right in.
“There are so many ways to understand what a lady is saying just by how she carries her umbrella! Like if she holds it like this,”
And I would break in, “It means it’s raining?”
“No, no,” she would correct. “It means she’s married! And if she holds it like this,”
“She’s single?” I would ask, giggling.
“No! It means she’s married and her husband is coming.”
“So you run?”
“Of course not. Then you nod, like so.”
“So apologize?”
“No, stupid! It means you want to meet her around the corner!”
“But she’s married!”
“Exactly, so you have to wait for the signal from her.”
“Which is?”
My grandmother would then flirtatiously lift her dress a bit to show some leg, usually with dirty work pants and boots underneath since she was always gardening. This would always have me doubled over by this point, keeping me from finishing the skit.
She would always laugh along with me, then sit down in the nearest chair and remember the good old days, working the Vaudeville circuits with my grandfather.
Posted in photos of strangers
Tagged fiction, found photograph, Groucho Marx, Umbrella, Vaudeville