Above: The Old Tractor By The Old Round Barn II by Edward Fielding.
My advice to photographers is to embrace local subjects. These days it’s too easy to get caught up in exotic locations one sees on Social Media and start to believe that these places halfway across the globe are the only subject worth photographing. Meanwhile fantastic photo subject might be right around the corner.
Take one of my favorite subjects to photograph – old farm tractors. I find them whenever I travel around my area in Vermont and New Hampshire. Sometimes they are still in use, other times they are abandoned in the hay field, or they are propped up on front lawns as an ornament, show up fully restored as collector pieces at local agricultural fairs or sticFarmall k their noses out from an old pole barn.
I have hundreds of photographs of old farm tractors in my fine art photography portfolio. Old green and yellow John Deere tractors, red Farmall tractors, International Harvesters, Oliver green tractors, blue and white Ford tractors — even rusty old remnants of tractors too far gone to recognizes.
Museum-quality framed and matted fine art prints available as well as canvas, wood and acrylic prints available. https://edward-fielding.pixels.com/art/tractor