• Photos
    • LATEST
    • ARCHIVES
    • Process
    • Fujifilm
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
Menu

PETE TAKES PICTURES

  • Photos
  • BLOG
    • LATEST
    • ARCHIVES
  • Fujifilm-Thoughts
    • Process
    • Fujifilm
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT

Fuji X Adventures in North America - Rust Belt Pilgrim

January 22, 2015

Continuing the Small Town Pennsylvania Series.

All photographs taken with the X100, X-Pro1 and 18mm, 35mm and 56mm lenses.

Click on images to view in gallery and light-box modes.


Hidden Treasures

This is McKean County, Pennsylvania. Once the Allegheny hills were a forest of oil derricks, stretching as far as the eye could see along the ridges and valleys between Bradford, Olean, Kane and Smethport.  But then after the second world war the Mid-West oil industry collapsed when richer and easier pickings were found elsewhere. Now the trees have returned to the hills of McKean County, where they tactfully mask the industrial scars of old leaking pipes and rusting machinery. Here in the deep forest you hike and hunt alone at your peril. Folk have fallen through the rotting boards covering the shafts of old oil wells. A sudden snap and then a long agonising tumble, a broken leg and no phone reception - miles from civilisation. So I made sure I stuck to the roadside for my photography.

But still, here and there nestled in isolated pockets on the winding country roads, industry survives. Smoke rises from the stacks. Steam boils from the pipes. You can hear the hum of machinery and the clanking of gears and wheels. This is rust belt America, but here and there you can see signs of recovery. The county capital of Bradford may have lost half her population in the crash that followed the 1940's, but unlike the deprived ex-mining communities in the valleys of South Wales there's still hope.  

View fullsize refinery2-1.jpg
View fullsize refinery3-1.jpg
View fullsize ruralrust4.jpg
View fullsize ruralrust3.jpg
View fullsize openroad3.jpg
View fullsize ruralrust5.jpg
View fullsize ruralrust7.jpg
View fullsize openroad2.jpg
View fullsize refinery4.jpg

Rust the dirty red of dried blood. Tarmac a blue slick bruise. A bright overcast sky like bleached bone and metal glinting before a tartan backdrop of autumn trees. This is the colour of industry in North Western Pennsylvania.   

And then there's the tangle of wires threading the tilted telegraph poles, the snaking pipes and towering chimney stacks. You walk back and forth, shifting position until all these elements break apart from each other and the scene falls into place - like actors finding their marks upon a stage. 

Colour and composition making a strange, brutal sort of beauty that I find it oddly compelling. 


Good Cars Go to Heaven

I pull away from the factory, take a road steeply sloping up the hillside. I crest the ridge and the road plunges away snaking crazily through a series of tight valleys. Here and there sits an isolated homestead, trapped in the eternal shade of the densely wooded, high hills. In many rural counties you can find cars choking the riverbanks, having been pushed off the side of the road and rolled on down towards the overgrown shadows of the canopied river bed. But here between Smethport and Bradford old cars have a kinder fate. I spy them from the car window, scattered like rusting cattle in an open field, proudly displayed for all photographers to enjoy. 

Oh wait, 'No Trespassing'. Blood and sand. I decide not to risk further blows to the head this holiday - or worse yet a shotgun blast - and stick to shooting from the grass verge, keeping shy of the gate. 

There's no denying it. Cars looked cooler back then.


Going Against the Grain

In the centre of Bradford sits a giant series of concrete grain silos. No longer in use, they stand there sullenly, having shrugged off the attempts by puny humans to destroy them with dynamite. They were simply too well constructed to be destroyed, apparently the explosives just bounced off. And I can't see nature beating them down any century soon either. So there they will remain, like giant tombs. And man will have to muddle on around them as best he can.

This is one of the glorious things about having a nation as big as America, you can just afford to walk away from such things and redevelop some place else. And when things decay, they decay with style.

View fullsize grainsilospor.jpg
View fullsize grainsilospor-2.jpg

Beauty is where you find it. Ugliness waits only for that special light to transform it into something quite striking. The way the early evening sun brushed its light upon the face of the cylinders, leaving the contours wrapped in shadow  - well, it's a simple thing but it gives me pleasure. 

I hope you enjoyed this little rust belt pilgrimage. Stick around for more upcoming Fuji X-Ploits this year, with further small town America stuff and a return to the wind and rain of winter Wales!


Subscribe to Pete Takes Pictures by Email
BLOG RSS

Featured
StormDennisExtra0 49.jpg
February 17, 2020
Storm Dennis
February 17, 2020
February 17, 2020
Title Image0 1.jpg
October 27, 2019
Space Invaders
October 27, 2019
October 27, 2019
Exploration in Colour - on Capture One & Fujifilm
June 7, 2019
Exploration in Colour - on Capture One & Fujifilm
June 7, 2019
June 7, 2019
Groundwork - International Women's Day
March 15, 2019
Groundwork - International Women's Day
March 15, 2019
March 15, 2019
Beth1BlockLandscape-5.jpg
February 1, 2019
Dreamscape
February 1, 2019
February 1, 2019
Becoming Human
December 2, 2018
Becoming Human
December 2, 2018
December 2, 2018
Dungerness Landscape-15.jpg
September 5, 2018
Strange Lands
September 5, 2018
September 5, 2018
ReferendumBlog-3.jpg
July 26, 2018
Second Referendum
July 26, 2018
July 26, 2018
HomeBlog-6.jpg
June 11, 2018
Magnum - HOME
June 11, 2018
June 11, 2018
TheShard-16.jpg
May 12, 2018
London Calling with the X100F
May 12, 2018
May 12, 2018
Snowblind2-9.jpg
March 26, 2018
Sunburst & Snowblind - Part Two
March 26, 2018
March 26, 2018
Snowfall-12.jpg
March 18, 2018
Sunburst & Snowblind - Part One
March 18, 2018
March 18, 2018
Hurnlandscape-6.jpg
February 6, 2018
Magnum Photographs with Hurn, Home and Fujifilm
February 6, 2018
February 6, 2018
HepBlog-5.jpg
December 14, 2017
The Colour and The Shape
December 14, 2017
December 14, 2017
Wilde-1.jpg
November 30, 2017
The Trial of Oscar Wilde
November 30, 2017
November 30, 2017
X100FTitle-1.jpg
November 7, 2017
X100F - The Storyteller
November 7, 2017
November 7, 2017
HubFestBlog-2.jpg
September 14, 2017
The Hub Festival - Capturing Music and Motion
September 14, 2017
September 14, 2017
August 9, 2017
Film & Vision - Finding Inspiration
August 9, 2017
August 9, 2017
June 18, 2017
Nine Hours in London
June 18, 2017
June 18, 2017
June 7, 2017
Gracias Cardiff - At the UEFA Champions League Final
June 7, 2017
June 7, 2017
April 28, 2017
Film & Vision - Making Fuji-X Simulations Work For You
April 28, 2017
April 28, 2017
Twisted by Design
February 27, 2017
Twisted by Design
February 27, 2017
February 27, 2017
February 1, 2017
Cardiff After Dark
February 1, 2017
February 1, 2017
January 26, 2017
Six Months with the X-Pro2
January 26, 2017
January 26, 2017
January 7, 2017
2016 - A Fujifilm Year in Thirty-Six Exposures
January 7, 2017
January 7, 2017
December 11, 2016
Gimme Shelter
December 11, 2016
December 11, 2016
November 5, 2016
Fear of Future
November 5, 2016
November 5, 2016
September 14, 2016
A Judgement in Black & White
September 14, 2016
September 14, 2016
July 23, 2016
A Tale of One City
July 23, 2016
July 23, 2016
June 19, 2016
Vigil
June 19, 2016
June 19, 2016
In X-Pro1, X100, Travelogue, Archive 1 Tags x-pro1, x100, 18mm, 35mm f/1.4, 56mm f/1.2, america, pennsylvania, mckean, bradford, rust belt, industry, ruins, cars, abandoned, dilapidated, decay, rural, replichrome, silos, factories, travelogue, fuji, archive
← Fuji X Adventures in North America - Seeing Things in Black and WhiteFuji X Adventures in North America - A Town Called Bradford →

Latest Posts

Featured
May 15, 2026
Pellentesque Risus Ridiculus
May 15, 2026
May 15, 2026
May 8, 2026
Porta
May 8, 2026
May 8, 2026
May 1, 2026
Etiam Ultricies
May 1, 2026
May 1, 2026
April 24, 2026
Vulputate Commodo Ligula
April 24, 2026
April 24, 2026
April 17, 2026
Elit Condimentum
April 17, 2026
April 17, 2026
April 10, 2026
Aenean eu leo Quam
April 10, 2026
April 10, 2026
April 3, 2026
Cursus Amet
April 3, 2026
April 3, 2026
March 27, 2026
Pellentesque Risus Ridiculus
March 27, 2026
March 27, 2026
March 20, 2026
Porta
March 20, 2026
March 20, 2026
March 13, 2026
Etiam Ultricies
March 13, 2026
March 13, 2026

Powered by Squarespace