The World Is Flat.
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Dustin Shum’s work can be found here:
This is one of the better perspectives of China I’ve seen, I love all the little strange things that Dustin Shum focuses on in the landscape. The colors and composition are also brilliant, so that helps quite a bit.
Images of exterior design, architecture, and outdoor spaces that I love.
I can’t wait to landscape a house of my own, put that fort mentality to work. All I need is a good plot of land. You can do anything with land.
This is where I live, this is my room. I think it’s a step in the right direction.
I’ve concluded now, with some amount of certainty, that my main obsession with life will be getting a hold of some land and house. Once that’s all said and done, I’ll spend the rest of my years building outwards, transforming the interior and the landscape into something else.
I have a lot of ideas about how I want to do it, but I’m sure the transformation will mostly be up to the materials I have to work with, and my own skill in applying them to form. I also have to keep in mind that this process will take countless years, and that I may never be completely finished.
Now it’s a game of resource allocation, planning and patience.
I took it upon myself to capture some decent photographs on a recent visit to the historic James J. Hill House, while still keeping up with the tour group. I wasn’t sure if I would be allowed to bring my tripod with, so I left it in the car, but it turned out to be quite dark in there.
The images above are a small selection of what I managed to salvage from the poor lighting conditions, in spite of my camera’s distaste for ISO’s higher than 400.
“James J. Hill House”
Completed Mid 2011 - Photography Work - Shapes Industries