Found photo with typography from my Brother Typewriter.
NEW! This print, along with others, is now available on my ETSY.
Found photo with typography from my Brother Typewriter.
NEW! This print, along with others, is now available on my ETSY.
Posted in flash fiction, photos of strangers, Typography
Tagged 1960s, asking her to marry you, fiction, flash fiction, kitsch, love, marraige, marriage, photography, photos, picnic, popping the question, relationships, retro, romance, typography, vintage
As he sat in his moon chair listening to the rain he realized what a perfect Sunday it was.
Peaceful.
Relaxing.
He felt the excited/trapped feeling people get sometimes in storms. Moments like this had been his favorite since he was a child.
It was nearly perfect, but something was missing. As soon as he recognized what else the day called for, he ran to his record collection, moved a lamp close by so he could read them in the cloudy darkness, and pulled out all four of his Smiths records. He put one on, turned the sound down to a three, and returned to the moon chair just as A Rush and A Push and the Land is Ours started up on the player.
Posted in flash fiction
Tagged contemplation, fiction, flash fiction, hipster, inspiration, kitsch, life, love, moon chair, Morrissey, music, photography, photos, rain, rainy day, rainy day fun, records, relaxation, Smiths, Sunday, vintage, vinyl, weather
They put their vacation on hold for a few minutes when they saw the flea market sign. He slammed on the brakes, throwing a cloud of dust up from the dirt road their GPS lead them to, and made a quick turn.
“Is it okay?”
“Of course it is!” she said with an excited smile. “Although we really don’t need bait or ice.”
“Very funny,” he said as he pulled into the empty lot.
They got out of the car and couldn’t help but notice the building, a run-down diner on a dirt road in the middle of nowhere.
“Maybe the sign should say “Horror Movie” or something. Feel like we might be killed?”
“It’s entirely likely,” she said with a pretend-scared face. “Come on, the yard sale must be around back.”
They ignored the rusty screen door hanging from one hinge and passed the diner made of what looked like light blue, chipping paint. The windows were too dirty to see in clearly, but the lights appeared to be on inside and someone was standing at the counter, but not moving.
“This really is like a horror movie,” he said. She nodded as they turned the corner.
Behind the diner there were several little bungalows covering shelves that held countless objects. Thousands of old items were piled everywhere, yet appeared to be organized. One shelf in the far corner of the lot was piled with old glasses, jars and vases. Each bungalow seemed to be organized in some way, although neither of them could figure out the order.
Beyond the eternal yard sale were huge ditches, run-down vehicles, piles of chopped
wood accompanied by a colorful beach umbrella and old farming equipment.
“I keep waiting for a creepy, dirty man in overalls and no shirt to come out with some kind of ax he’s just slaughtered today’s special with,” he said.
“I know, right? But I have to photograph this.”
“Obviously.”
As she walked around snapping shot after shot he searched through the piles of stuff. Old wanted posters. Roller skates. Broken typewriters. Vintage statues and figures of every animal that ever existed. He found an owl and held it up for her.
“Hey, check it out! An owl!”
Her head poked out from the next bungalow over, her camera strap around her neck. “Say cheese!” she said as she held it up and snapped a shot. She looked at the screen. “Too dark. Sorry,” she said as she deleted it.
He continued to root through the randomness of the collection, sure he would find something here that he wanted. He always did. A random old toy. A cartoon character drinking glass. Postcards. Photos. Something that would inspire a story. He kept looking as she took shot after shot.
“Make sure you get one of the roller skates,” he yelled.
“Done and done!” her voice called from a hidden part of a bungalow.
He smiled. Their thought patters were always so similar.
He went to the far corner of the lot and surveyed the land around it, the broken down vehicles, the rusty old unrecognizable objects. He wanted to shoot a horror film here. Or write one, at least. Do something. His skin tingled with ideas.
She finally emerged. “Damn, already took two hundred photos. Now I’ll have to upload them tonight when we get there to make some space on this thing!”
This was going to be an inspiring trip.
Posted in flash fiction, Zoey and Xander
Tagged collectables, death, diner, fiction, flash fiction, flea market, friends, horror, humor, kitsch, life, love, photography, photos, relationships, road trip, romance, run down, scary, trash, trip, vacation, vintage, yard sale
Made from vintage home movies, my G5 Mac and FCP.
Posted in films of strangers, flash fiction, Typography
Tagged alone, child, childhood, dinner, family, family get together, family party, fiction, film, final cut pro, flash fiction, home, home movies, kid, kitsch, life, lonely, love, Macintosh, movie, movies, relationships, retro, vintage
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged A Coney Island of the Mind, art, beat poet, books, Coney Island, fiction, flash fiction, kitsch, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, life, little black dress, nature, New York City, photography, photos, poem, poetry, reading, relationships, typography, vintage, willow tree
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
This work can be purchased HERE.
Created with my Brother Charger 11, my imagination and an old post card set I found from 1949.
Posted in flash fiction, Typography
Tagged 1949, fiction, flash fiction, kitsch, life, love, Maine, old, Portland, postcard, romance, typewriter, typography, vintage