A grain of sand builds a mountain, a seed grows a forest, a raindrop fills a river. It is the tiny things that make the big things possible.

The slow, quiet, process

The American photographer Eliot Porter wrote of the slow, quiet, processes that pass almost unnoticed from season to season. His photographs of a woodland floor in winter inspired me to look more closely at what was around and under my feet.

The natural landscape of forest, mountain or moor begins in or on the ground. These slow, quiet, processes underlie and support all that we simplistically describe as landscape - and this realisation caused me to think seriously about what I was trying to achieve with my camera. I began to spend more time looking down than up, drawn to the granular detail and patterns evident at macro or close-up level rather than the broader landscape.

Eliot Furness Porter (December 6, 1901 – November 2, 1990) was an American photographer best known for his colour photographs of nature.

Husk: from the Middle Dutch word 'huusken' meaning 'little house’

By the end of November most plants and trees have completed their autumnal senescence. The ground is covered in dead and decaying leaves; the hedgerows and margins populated by the skeletal remains of flowering plants and the desiccated husks of seed heads.

My objective with Husk has been to take the tiny autumn discards and by photographing them in a particular way reveal their structural beauty and elevate them from invisible to undeniable. To present the viewer with a complexity that one would normally associate with a piece of sculpture, or jewellery. But unlike a Fabergé egg or a Giacometti figure, the material itself is worthless yet the form is extraordinary.

In botany, a husk (or hull) is the outer shell or coating of a seed. The other botanical term for a seed casing is Calyx, from the Latin calix which itself comes from the Ancient Greek κάλυξ (kálux) meaning "husk" or "pod".

Husk can also refer to the exuvia of insects or other small animals left behind after moulting.

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Two related projects can be found here.