Thursday, May 31, 2012

Photographing Route 66


The Main Street of America


Before the advent of the modern highway system, during the first Golden Age of the Automobile, a new roadway captured the imagination of the American traveler.



Route 66, also known as the Main Street of America, stretched 2,451 miles from Chicago to Los Angeles and opened up The West to a new breed of adventurer.

More than an interstate thoroughfare, Route 66 symbolized key values of Twentieth Century - independence, self-expression, and the lure of the open road.

For the first time in human history, one person traveling alone could cross a continent within a few days, no longer bound by the timetables of ships and railroads.

A new spirit of American individualism shifted into high gear and never looked back.


a photo of a ford edsel on historic route 66 in arizona


a photo of an elvis statue on historic route 66 in arizona


a photo of an antique gas station on historic route 66 in arizona


a photo of the visitor center in seligman arizona on historic route 66

a photo of a bench on historic route 66 in arizona

a photograph of a mural along route 66 in williams arizona

Edsels.  Chevrolets.  Roadside garages with resident mechanics.

A simpler era.

A different time.

A time that still exists on Route 66.

a photograph of an old chevrolet on route 66 in seligman arizona


a photograph of a sign on route 66 return to the fifties


a photo of a motel sign on historic route 66 in seligman arizona



Camera:
            Canon EOS 5D Mark II

Lenses:
            24-105 f/4L IS
            70-200 f/4L IS


Light happens.  Be ready.  Shoot hard.


Copyright © 2012 Daniel R. South
All Rights Reserved