a thought
I create photographs of wild, quiet places—scenes meant to be felt as much as seen. Each print is an invitation to pause, breathe, and reconnect with the natural world.
I was searching for a quiet and slowly grown view of a favorite place along the coast of Maine.
A place this popular to photograph demands patience and a witnessed presence. I knew it wouldn't be easy. I visited in winter, spring, and summer—standing on the rocks at the base of the cliffs and returning again and again to the overlooks above. I studied countless photographs of Portland Head Light. Most focus on dramatic storm waves from the south, and they are powerful images. But I felt I had little new to add there.
This view, though, offered something different. In summer, it allowed the colors of sunrise to slowly unfold, and color is what excites me most in nature. Finding these moments can feel like a revelation—brief, shifting, and slightly disorienting. Then it comes together. I knew I had found my photograph. I felt humbled that the search had finally been answered.
This place feels familiar to almost everyone in Maine, which makes it easy to forget how exposed and fragile it truly is. Standing there early, before most people arrive, I'm reminded that this headland has endured centuries of wind, salt, and rising seas. That tension—between permanence and erosion, beauty and vulnerability—is what keeps pulling me back.
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