Entries from Studio Mathewes tagged with 'holga'

Nature, nature, everywhere

A miniature photo essay on nature, looking up, out, and down, from empty & untouched to grounded & manipulated....

Checkerboard Fountain

For our honeymoon, my husband Stephen and I decided that we would make our way to the Bonnaroo Music Festival in Manchester, TN. With the exception of this past year, we've made it back every summer (Steve went solo for...

A theme of stars

When they're not falling from the sky, they're gracing our lives in decorative ways. a variation on this photograph...

Green vs. Blue

In one corner, we have our challenger, Green! You may remember him from such films as Spring and Summer. He's all over your least favorite vegetables, but boy, our forests would be ugly without him. And now I give you...

Sculpture Dance

Anyone who's been to the Inner Harbor in Baltimore may have seen the strange lattice sculpture down by the Maryland Science Center near Federal Hill. I have no idea who made it, but it sure is a visually interesting element....

Suburban Tree

I spend a lot of time at my sister-in-law's house. She lives ten minutes away, in a suburb of Baltimore. Many, many times I've photographed her kids while enjoying conversation, dinners, and games. This is the tree that shades their...

Beach Diptych

Well, I'm sad to say that I missed blogging my "one a day" portraits the past few days. However, it was for the absolutely wonderful reason that my cousin Martha got married in Barnstable, MA (Cape Cod) on Saturday. I...

Merry-Go-Round

Back when I was teaching at Park Camps, we took a few field trips. Once, we went to Patterson Park, and the last trip we took was to the Inner Harbor in Baltimore. Down by the Federal Hill area is...

Hands in the Horizon

Remember that cardboard box in the back of my fridge? Well, quite a bit of film has returned from the lab, most of it medium format black and white work. It's been such a trip looking through it and seeing...

Playing with HOLGA

In college, I discovered a beautiful little plastic camera, called the HOLGA, which enabled me to explore medium format film without investing $500 in an expensive camera body. Always, my photographs had to involve people. I recruited roommates, myself, my...