<<Prev                                                   Home                        PDF                              Next>>





(R) Green River Utah melon stand, best in the west. Gelatin silver print from Polaroid P/N negative. 1988
(L) Back when a Cafe sign implied nothing more than a cup-a-joe, and a hearty help­ing of grease. No Wi/Fi, no Grande, no Foursquare (look it up). The former Canyonlands Cafe, was on Main Street, Moab, Utah. Polaroid SX70 print.
The old Robber's Roost Motel sign, Main St, Green River Utah. Replaced several years ago with a new yet unimproved version.
Park Service sign-shop fail. North of Arches National Park. Polaroid SX70. (Don't go looking, it's long gone)
Terry Knouff has been loving the Canyonlands country since 1979, and living in it since 1987. But his first love ( not counting Claudia Fancier in the 4th grade) is photography. Especially instant photogra­phy, the kind the Polaroid Corporation once provided to the world. Those days are past, Polaroid went belly up, and the Canyonlands have , by some estima­tions, been loved to death. But life goes on, and Terry continues to find enjoyment in the Canyon Country near his home in Moab, Utah, and in the art of Pho­tography. He has since found some satisfaction in digital photography, but of late he's yearned for the "good-old-days" of his instant photography youth. He is currently exploring instant films offered by other companies and former employees of Polaroid, un­der the banner of the "Impossible Film Project". And building his perfect instant photography beast, The Frankenroid. You can find his photography online at http://www.flickr.com/photos/tknouff/
Old movie set, north of Moab, Utah. 1988. Polaroid Positive/Negative film





<<Prev                                                   Home                        PDF                              Next>>