Our Story
What we do is Travel Photography
​The name implies the photographer is dancing around the globe shooting pictures of tourist spots. There’s some truth to the globe-trotter bit, but Travel Photography is a style and a mixture of landscape, culture and cityscapes. It’s the things and scenes we see when traveling - at home or abroad.
​Why Travel Photography?
​The thing is, we like both travel and photography. Our tag line “Every Picture Tells a Story’, is known from Rod Stewart's album by the same name but it's first notable commercial usage was in Kidney Pill Ads in 1902. To get to it, we listed our top 10 ideas about Travel Photography:
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Become a Global Citizen
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Immerse yourself in the cultures, peoples, and lifestyles of the world
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Building new and deeper relationships
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Opens our minds to different perspectives
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Enhance planning and collaboration skills
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Learn first-hand about our history and origins
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Experience world geography and nature
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Personal growth and discovering purpose
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Enjoy experiences that become lasting memories
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Take some fantastic photographs!!
Who we are
​Looking back at the first half of my career, I spent many years as a Commercial Printer working with the Advertising and Photography businesses. Despite growing in different directions, today I am working with photography again building a stock collection for Framed Prints and Licensing and doing photo shoots for Project Work.
1
Landscape
Getting up early for sunrise ia a labor of love, often with mixed results. We had 2 consecutive mornings at Hutchison Island in Florida of wonderful sunrises. What a great start to the day!!

2
Culture
Built in 12 AD, Rome’s Pantheon stands as the world’s largest unreinforced concrete dome, a testament to the ingenuity of ancient Roman builders. This architectural wonder features a dome with a diameter of 142 feet, crowned by an oculus that rises an equal 142 feet from the floor.

3
Cityscape
This striking image immediately captures the viewer's attention. Taken from beneath the Zakim Bridge in Boston, the shot looks upward, offering a unique and dramatic perspective. The 3-second exposure helped create the radiant, dreamlike quality.


