My daughter and I dined at counter in the Old Hamlin Restaurant. It
looks like a German restaurant, but you'll soon realize it's a third
generation Greek restaurant. Old Hamlin is a few doors over from Todd
& Brad Reed's photography studio, and we make a walk-through, and A
was transfixed by colorful and powerful and large-format images drawn
from life on Lake Michigan's shore near Ludington MI. I've have
attempted to hook my daughter on our sunsets of slendor, so she'll
come to see me more, and I thank Todd and Brad for helping. I've seen
many of these top sellers time and time again, and I'm jaded from
living on a shore where I can take my own, or simply look meditatively
at lighthouses and freighters for hours. It's not the great & glorious
lake at its moments of effulgence that grabs us. It's the lake
displaying its idiosyncratic being in endless ways, each moment a
shade of hue or brightness different, each day a progression of change
along a path of seasons. So when we entered a separate gallery for
their 365 project, that's where I regretted allocating a few bare
minutes to our stay. Yet, the website helps to correct our neglect:
http://www.toddandbradreed.com/lightbox/index/gallery/365_project. The family Reed joins the Burnham family of Leland, MI in a daily
photographic watch over Lake Michigan. I'm hoping that all of our
lakeside towns generate this local, daily attention. Visit the Leland Report: http://www.lelandreport.com/
looks like a German restaurant, but you'll soon realize it's a third
generation Greek restaurant. Old Hamlin is a few doors over from Todd
& Brad Reed's photography studio, and we make a walk-through, and A
was transfixed by colorful and powerful and large-format images drawn
from life on Lake Michigan's shore near Ludington MI. I've have
attempted to hook my daughter on our sunsets of slendor, so she'll
come to see me more, and I thank Todd and Brad for helping. I've seen
many of these top sellers time and time again, and I'm jaded from
living on a shore where I can take my own, or simply look meditatively
at lighthouses and freighters for hours. It's not the great & glorious
lake at its moments of effulgence that grabs us. It's the lake
displaying its idiosyncratic being in endless ways, each moment a
shade of hue or brightness different, each day a progression of change
along a path of seasons. So when we entered a separate gallery for
their 365 project, that's where I regretted allocating a few bare
minutes to our stay. Yet, the website helps to correct our neglect:
http://www.toddandbradreed.com/lightbox/index/gallery/365_project. The family Reed joins the Burnham family of Leland, MI in a daily
photographic watch over Lake Michigan. I'm hoping that all of our
lakeside towns generate this local, daily attention. Visit the Leland Report: http://www.lelandreport.com/
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