Thu, May 16, 8:35 PM CDT

Still Life with Duct Tape

Photography Urban/Cityscape posted on Dec 29, 2009
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Description


The ever-curious, artistic scientist in me has always been fascinated by juxtapositions of different surfaces and textures. Particularly how they respond to various weather conditions. Imagine my unbridled glee when I found a metal light pole swathed in paper and duct tape during the height of a snowstorm. I remembered my nerdy childhood experiments with duct tape applied artfully to the front bumper of my father’s Pontiac Bonneville station wagon. I’d wanted to see how long it would take for it to wear off in the dead of winter. I’ll never know the answer to that terribly important scientific quandary, as my father—a non-nerd—removed it before driving away. And then there was the Tonka truck that I buried in my mother’s flower garden to see how long it would take for it to disintegrate…. This picture was made on Lawrence Avenue in the Albany Park neighborhood of Chicago on December 19th, 2009.

Comments (8)


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beachzz

11:17PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

Duct tape--and blue plastic tarps, what would the world do without them??? Your Tonka truck story reminds me of the goldfish my brother flushed down the toilet to see if it would swim. Kids do the darndest things!! lol

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koosievantutte

11:22PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

so sad to hear that a very important experiment was stopped. i bet the tonka truck was discovered before the desintegration and anded up as the first experiment. nevertheless, you have an eye for surfaces and textures! very fine shot.

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Chipka

11:35PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

What an image! I love the way this is almost monocrhome; it heightens the winter vibe of this, and those tiny little reddish splashes really bring out extra and unexpected details. Great work, especially in your capture of the water/slushy-snow splotches. Zoom really works on this because there are hints of writing that are almost discernable and quite mysterious. I think that's my favorite part of the image. As for the text, well...it's nice to see that I wasn't the only nerd around. I never stuck things to car bumpers or buried trucks...but ah...I remember woodlice and other things with lots of legs. Remind me to tell you the earwig story...if I haven't told you already.

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Meisiekind

2:49AM | Wed, 30 December 2009

This brought a lovely chuckle Corey! Yeah - we do silly things as kids which at the time is the most important thing in the whole world! Wonderful image and rememberance of a childhood long gone! Bravo! :)

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auntietk

1:09AM | Thu, 31 December 2009

I cannot BELIEVE he took the duct tape off the bumper of the car. Sheesh. No respect for science! I can certainly understand why you would have wanted to know that. This is an excellent capture, with loads of texture and temperature! Fine work, my dear.

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bmac62

10:21AM | Thu, 31 December 2009

In the Army, duct tape is called 100 mile per hour tape. Anything taped with it can easily survive what it is taped to going 100MPH without falling off or becoming unstuck. So, maybe your dad was planning to exceed 100MPH and didn't want you to lose your tape. Some times old assumptions are wrong. LOL. Happy New Year Corey from the snow swept plains of Kansas.

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jeanebean

10:44AM | Thu, 31 December 2009

I never knew you buried a Tonka truck in my flower garden, you sneaky boy. I like your photo tho and hope the paper & tape stay on the pole long enough to complete your experiment!

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anahata.c

8:07PM | Wed, 06 January 2010

I really should do your latest, but I've not commented on many things, so I jump around as I come back to commenting...You have a way with lots of objects in one image, confluences, massings of 'things'...it's so hard to do well but there are people who do them as if they were born to it. You're one of those people. (I know you have lots of background, and shots like this didn't just 'pop out' of you overnight, but you make them seem like you've been doing them since you were born.) It's a gloriously messy shot, all kinds of criss-crossing surfaces, I love what looks like a spanish poster on the left, with the tape and that complex post or wall surface, and some other kind of posting on the right (a personal message?). This is real neighborhood stuff, showing that even in the inhuman city, there are countless pockets of human activity and energies. And the bigness of it (I'm viewing full size) loses not one iota in sharpness--it's big & splashy & big & contrasty, with a wonderful messy composition; and you left a little city in the background--left--to give us bearing. Artist? chance collision. Defacer? melted snow. All seen through your eye. Wonderful jazzy & masterful without a thought...


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/5.1
MakeNIKON
ModelCOOLPIX S230
Shutter Speed10/930
ISO Speed400
Focal Length14

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