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Phil Douglis | all galleries >> Galleries >> Gallery Forty-Five: Using clouds to imply meaning > Tulloch Mill Ruins, Knights Ferry, California, 2008
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20-MAY-2008

Tulloch Mill Ruins, Knights Ferry, California, 2008

Thousands of miners passed through this town as they crossed the Stanislaus River on their way to the gold diggings during the heyday of California’s Gold Rush. The massive ruins of a flourmill still stand in a field of rusty weeds under a sky that seems to come from a Van Gogh painting. The swirling white clouds in the deep blue sky echo the swirls of pattern in the weedy field below. Effective landscape photographs will often convey meaning by combining ideas expressed by both the land and the sky above. In this case, the repeating swirls on both ends of the image provide a richly textured canvas for the ruins of the old mill.

Sigma DP1
1/200s f/9.0 at 16.6mm iso100 full exif

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Phil Douglis20-Aug-2008 02:50
Thanks, Delog -- I think that mood, drama, and history go well together. I tried to incorporate all of these assets into this concept.
blizzard19-Aug-2008 22:14
drama mood
real history
excellent work v
Phil Douglis17-Jul-2008 17:50
Thanks, Christine, for likening these clouds to a blanket. You use a good metaphor -- a blanket covers, envelops, and comforts. These clouds do all of these things for the ruins of the old mill.
Christine P. Newman16-Jul-2008 22:03
The clouds look like a comfortable blanket.
Phil Douglis27-May-2008 18:45
Thanks for seeing the flow of the "arch of nature" here, Tim -- it sweeps through the grass from the base of the image, and then explodes into the sky in both directions. You are right -- the ruins inject themselves into the midst of that flow. The ruins of man stand empty and lifeless, while the work of nature seems to throb with energy here.
Tim May27-May-2008 17:26
And the mill intrudes in the middle - symbolizing for me the role of "man" in the arch of nature.
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