Windows

I prefer the light. I prefer warmth. I like the big windows.

I've Long noticed that many (most) of the homes I have seen in New Jersey have very few windows. Especially the larger houses. It's as though some architects found inspiration in a box with small holes—the kind of box you use to transport small rodents home from the pet store.

This entry is a response to the Daily Prompt.

When we take photos, we use all kinds of things to frame our images and get the viewer's eye to focus where we want it: plants, architectural elements, lighting. You know what else can be a great frame? An actual frame — a window frame.

I've seen homes where the entire side of the home is paved in vinyl save for a tiny and sad window. This is usually the side of the house with a two-car garage. Why can't garages have windows? It's not like people parks cars in garages anymore. The garage is a place to store all the stuff that used to be in the basement. The windowless basement has been finished and no longer looks good with all that junk.

So when did the "War on Windows" start? Was it around the time Americans stopped decorating rooms with personal items? When beige and white became the best colours because you know "resale value". Not all cities in the USA are lacking in colour. South Carolina, Florida, and California have some very colourful cities. Maybe it's a northern USA issue.

It's the same inside most office buildings. Beige carpeting. White walls. Grey cubicles. No light. The office building where I work has small windows on the outer wall. That's where the court executives sit. Staff sit in cubicles running along the inner walls. No windows.

Center for Historical Analysis, Rutgers University
Center for Historical Analysis, Rutgers University | Sunday 1 October, 2017 | Nikon D5100 | 1250 sec | ISO 100 | 35 mm f/1.8 | F8

When my wife and I looked to buy our home 15 years ago, one of the things we loved was how many windows we had. And how much light they let in. If you've followed this blog for more than a moment, you'll know that I'm from the British West Indies. I'm not a fan of winter. It's grey and white and beige. It's the same colour scheme as the inside (and outside) of the average New Jersey home.

I prefer the light. I prefer warmth. I like the big windows.

Each Wednesday, The Daily Prompt Photo Challenge provides a theme for creative inspiration. Participants take photographs based on their interpretation of the theme and post them on their blog anytime before the following Wednesday.

Waiting

Waiting by Frank Jansen (The Daily Post)

Share a snapshot that shows a sense of waiting.

Each Wednesday, The Daily Prompt Photo Challenge provides a theme for creative inspiration. Participants take photographs based on their interpretation of the theme, and post them on their blog anytime before the following Wednesday.

Waiting by Frank Jansen (The Daily Post)

Share a snapshot that shows a sense of waiting.

I pulled one from the Lightroom catalogue. I didn't encounter any queues of people waiting. Or animals waiting. This is as waiting as it gets.

signatiure

Each Wednesday, The Daily Prompt Photo Challenge provides a theme for creative inspiration. Participants take photographs based on their interpretation of the theme and post them on their blog anytime before Wednesday. Elemental

Structure

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/structure/ (The Daily Post)

This week, share with us the structure of something typically overlooked.

Each Wednesday, The Daily Prompt Photo Challenge provides a theme for creative inspiration. Participants take photographs based on their interpretation of the theme, and post them on their blog anytime before the following Wednesday.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/structure/ (The Daily Post)

This week, share with us the structure of something typically overlooked.

My son, Shaan, is a freshman at the Honors College at Rutgers University in New Brunswick. For the next four years expect to see post about the campus, the university, and surrounding area.

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is the nation’s eighth oldest institution of higher learning—one of only nine colonial colleges established before the American Revolution— with a centuries-old tradition of rising to the challenges of each new generation.

  • 1650 :: New College/Harvard University
  • 1693 :: College of William & Mary
  • 1701 :: Collegiate School/Yale University
  • 1746 :: College of New Jersey/Princeton University
  • 1754 :: King’s College/Columbia University
  • 1755 :: College of Philadelphia/University of Pennsylvania
  • 1764 :: College of Rhode Island/Brown University
  • 1766 :: Queen’s College/Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
  • 1769 :: Dartmouth College

Rutgers Business School–Newark and New Brunswick (RBS) is an integral part of one of the nation’s oldest, largest, and most distinguished institutions of higher learning: Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, which was chartered in 1766.
Founded in 1929, Rutgers Business School has been accredited since 1941 by AACSB International–the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business — a distinction that represent the hallmark of excellence in management education. Today, Rutgers Business School is educating more than 4,000 undergraduate and graduate students at two main campuses in New Jersey as well as six satellite locations in New Jersey, China, and Singapore. The school boasts a strong network of 33,000 living alumni.Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Structure, Building, Rutgers Business School
The Rutgers University School of Business, Piscataway, New Jersey
[exif id="31577"]

Structure, Building, Rutgers Business School
The Rutgers University School of Business, Piscataway, New Jersey
[exif id="31578"]

Structure, Building, Rutgers Business School
The Rutgers University School of Business, Piscataway, New Jersey
[exif id="31579"]

Structure, Building, Rutgers Business School
The Rutgers University School of Business, Piscataway, New Jersey
[exif id="31581"]

signatiure

Each Wednesday, The Daily Prompt Photo Challenge provides a theme for creative inspiration. Participants take photographs based on their interpretation of the theme, and post them on their blog anytime before the following Wednesday.