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Photographs – Chris Flannery

Locations for Boudoir Photography

“Here is a list of suggestions for locations where you can take your boudoir photography. It is likely that you will not have access to every location, but it should help to give you some ideas and get those creative juices flowing.” from John G. Blair’s Digital Boudoir Photography

These are all in the book. Honest.

Some seem pretty reasonable: backyard, back porch, bathroom, bathtub, beach (private), deck, on a bedspread on the floor, hotel room, family room, fireplace, home office, home library, home spa, hot tub, mountains, sand dunes, stairs, shower, stone wall, swimming pool, and tree.

Some seem questionable: car, dining room, front porch, guest room, motel, garage, log, trailer, and wooden fence.

Some seem unhygienic: kitchen, laundry room, and pantry.

Some seem impractical: 18 wheeler cab, 18 wheeler truck, bed and breakfast inn, brick wall, camper, chain-link fence, desert, field of wildflowers, private airplane, private elevator, and RV.

Some seem creepy-pervy: attic, basement, swing-set, tire swing, tree house, and tree swing.

Fading Ad

Fading Ad by Frank H. Jump is one of my favorite blogs.

The Fading Ad Campaign began as a photographic project documenting vintage mural ads on building brickfaces in New York City spanning nearly a century. It has become a metaphor for survival for me since, like myself, many of these ads have long outlived their expected life span. Although this project doesn’t deal directly with HIV/AIDS, it is no accident I’ve chosen to document such a transitory and evanescent subject. Of the hundreds of ads I’ve photographed, many have already been covered up, vandalized, or destroyed. But still many silently cling to the walls of buildings, barely noticed by the rushing passersby.

This blog was originally designed to be a cross-curricular instructional tool, emphasizing science & technology while examining media literacies and cultural movements. Fading Ad Blog has since grown to become a collaboration with urban archaeologist around the country and from here in Brooklyn as well.

There is a good chuck of old Scranton, PA related ads.

I highly recommend visiting.