In this image, multiple currents converge and overlap, creating a sense of movement that feels both lateral and forward. A pale band of water moves across the frame, pressing into darker passages that slide beneath and around it. The result is a surface shaped by collision rather than continuity.
The creek appears restless here. Light and shadow weave together, forming soft edges that shift and reform as the flow advances. No single current dominates for long. Instead, the image holds a moment where direction feels unsettled, guided by subtle forces beneath the surface.
There is depth without stillness. The water carries weight, yet it never fully settles into a fixed shape. The eye moves through the frame the way the current does, drawn along diagonal paths that dissolve as quickly as they form.
This photograph is part of a limited series made during a single morning along Porter Creek in the Capital State Forest. The series reflects a brief interval of heightened flow, when rising water revealed patterns that exist only under specific conditions.
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