Showing posts with label Abandoned. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abandoned. Show all posts

Thursday, February 14, 2013

...



On our way back to Houston, I had to stop again at this old farm house, if only long enough to take a few pictures.

I decided to include the power plant in the background and I'm so glad I did. The new perspective hives it a completely different aspect.

Click here to see the same farm house taken about six months ago by my old CyberShot:

 Old Abandoned Farmhouse - When children’s voices called, Where grasses now stand still

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Rust to rust



Out on the hunt for interesting subject matter in rural White County Arkansas and came across these two babies.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Old things



Took a trip back to Austin to check out some places and see about locating property owners and I revisited this old truck to get some new shots with the 5D.

Monday, October 1, 2012

Now close the windows and hush all the fields...

All alone... North Austin Texas Farm Shed HDR in Black and White

Reminds me of The Wizard of OZ for some reason. Just on the other side of the toll road from our apartment in north Austin, Texas, was a bunch of old, dilapidated farm buildings that were pleading with me to come photograph them.

Once again I am reminded of a quote from Michelangelo I used for another post title: "A beautiful thing never gives so much pain as does failing to hear and see it......".

If you liked this one, check out this older post: Leaving this old farm house to it's loneliness and decay. It's of another structure from the same area.

NOW close the windows and hush all the fields;
  If the trees must, let them silently toss;
No bird is singing now, and if there is,
  Be it my loss.
It will be long ere the marshes resume,       
  It will be long ere the earliest bird:
So close the windows and not hear the wind,
  But see all wind-stirred.

-Robert Frost-







       




Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Old Booth Texas School house and auditorium

Old Booth Texas School auditorium
I was in the area of Booth, Texas looking for something else entirely and I stumbled upon this little gem, the old Booth Texas school house and attached auditorium - 

Founded by freeman Irby Booth (1866 - 1931) about 1890, shortly after he bought
the surrounding property. In the early 1890s, Booth went to South Carolina and brought
back 30 families to settle his land. Early crops of cotton, corn, and rice were shipped
to market via the Brazos River. The post office opened March 21, 1894. By the early 1900s,
the town of Booth had a syrup mill, sawmill, and was serviced by the Gulf, Colorado &
Santa Fe Railroad, by which sugar cane, alfalfa, and truck vegetables were shipped.
Booth Public school opened in 1908 and operated until 1947.
(from the Historical Marker) 


Old Booth Texas School house and auditorium























                                                                                                                                                                                         



The information I found on this school house and the settlement of Booth in general was taken from :
which I found via:

Thursday, September 13, 2012

1940s Ford Super Deluxe 8

1940s Ford Super Deluxe 8 - cool - Richmond, Texas
 I'm back, after a little hiatus while getting acclimated to school again. Last weekend I was at this country store heading out of the Houston metropolitan area, after getting what I needed, I decided to take a little trip down the old farm-road-market road it was situated on. And as luck would have it, I came upon this old 40s Ford rusting away on the side of the road. Naturally I stopped to take some photos. It was position perfectly perpendicular to the road and the grass was mowed around it so I guess the land owner thought it would make a good lawn ornament and I heartily agree. These are a couple of the inside of the cab. They may look identical but they are two lightly different angles and on the second one I cranked up the temperature in processing to give it an older feel. It gave the windows a nice sepia look to them and it reminds me of some scene out of one of my favorite video game series; "Fallout".



1940s Ford Super Deluxe 8 - warm - Richmond, Texas

Sunday, September 2, 2012

leaving this old farm house to it's loneliness and decay

Old Farm House / Cow Shelter - North Austin, Texas - NE

Across the toll road from where we used to live in North Austin there was a bunch of old barns and storage sheds that had the look of abandonment. You almost don't notice them as your about to enter the tool road. I'm always focusing on the scary toll booths you have to drive through at speed or slow everybody down behind you. But one day I thought of them and I had some time to kill so I drove over there, hopped the fence and what a find. There was about six buildings falling into disuse over there, some big some small. And thanks to the local cattle that claim that land it was not over grown. It was like walking on a freshly cut lawn. Of all the photos from that day this is my favorite, the detail and the colors and the sky looked it's best in this picture. I don't think this paticular farmhouse is exactly abandoned, there was no doors and inside I noticed the frorund was littered with hoof prints. I supposed it now shelters the local farm animals...

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Into the sand, her frame was adjustin’ Long hard years had taken their toll...

Rusty Abandoned tore down 1940's truck - Cedar Park, Texas
 One day after work I noticed this old rusty tore down truck from the '40s I believe. I immediately went back and shot some photos. It was in the front yard of an old property off a main road hidden behind some commercial property. It was at sunset, perfect timing. I think of this sort of scene is a work of art started by man and then handed over to nature. The old green paint and all the rust, gorgeous...

For the second pic I reprocessed the photo, cranked the color all the way down. And then using the selection tool I replaced all of the windshield with the previous pic. Resulting in what you see here.







Rusty Abandoned tore down 1940's truck - Cedar Park, Texas - Black and White with color windshield

The old pickup truck stood rustin’
In a wash below the knoll,

Into the sand, her frame was adjustin’;
Long hard years had taken their toll.
Grass now grew from her floor boards.
Rust had cankered this old ride.
Mice had nested in her seat in hordes;
An’ she had gone an’ lost her pride.
She was robbed of any useful part…
The paint that was once bright an’ red,
Had made her look sassy an’ smart,
Was pink; showin’ of rust instead.
She had lost her tires an’ her wheels.
Her drive shaft…it was also gone
The engine was plagued with ills
She was done an’ wouldn’t be movin’ on.
Once was; the best money could buy;
A truck that was her owner’s pride;
Now she was left in a wash to lie…

Abandoned on the day she died.

THE OLD PICKUP TRUCK BELOW THE KNOLL by Dusty Boots