This is external media from Vimeo. So if it lags you can blame those assholes.

 
Cows.

Cows graze in Deerfield, MA.

This is a picture of cows. I take a lot of pictures of cows, but not, like, too many pictures of cows. That would be weird, man.

 

After a yearlong hiatus, my portfolio has been rebuilt. Check it out.

 

The best view in Western Massachusetts. Canon 60D, Tamron 28-75 f/2.8. 13 frames stitched together. Click to enlarge.

 

knit, originally uploaded by sp.sullivan.

Spotted under the Brooklyn Bridge in Brooklyn Heights, NY. What is it, you ask? The New York Times, which discovered Brooklyn in 2010, explains:

Yarn bombing takes that most matronly craft (knitting) and that most maternal of gestures (wrapping something cold in a warm blanket) and transfers it to the concrete and steel wilds of the urban streetscape. Hydrants, lampposts, mailboxes, bicycles, cars — even objects as big as buses and bridges — have all been bombed in recent years, ever so softly and usually at night.

MALIA WOLLAN, “Graffiti’s Cozy, Feminine Side,” NYT 05.18.11

 


Patriots., originally uploaded by sp.sullivan.

Members of Robert Erskine’s Militia stand in attention after a reading of the Declaration of Independence at Ringwood Manor in Ringwood, NJ.

 


Trick shot!, originally uploaded by sp.sullivan.

Canon 50mm f/1.8 at T-Bowl II in Wayne, New Jersey. A relaxing Fourth of July weekend with friends and family.

 

 


Liquori’s Pizza., originally uploaded by sp.sullivan.

I spent the afternoon at Antonio Liquori’s restaurant while shooting photos and video for our first-ever “Valley Food Championship.”

Liquori is an affable guy with a thick Italian accent. He told me he’d been making pizzas since he was 16.

“I left home, I went up in north Italy, Bologna, and that’s when I started my career,” he said.

My favorite thing about my job is when I get to go behind the scenes in the lives of strangers. They’re always way more interesting than you’d expect. Free pizza doesn’t hurt, either.

 


Radiolab in concert., originally uploaded by sp.sullivan.

Last night, I got to see two of my favorite things collide: Radiolab and Wilco.

Above, Jad Abumrad, host of Radiolab on WNYC, interviews percussionist and composer Glenn Kotche, who plays drums for Wilco. It was part of a performance-and-interview evening for an upcoming Radiolab podcast.

Also performing were Buke and Gass and Reggie Watts. All were, in a word, indescribable.