Traditional Barbershop Photography

Historic Barbershop Photography in Birmingham, Alabama

Birmingham, Alabama has a way of holding onto its past. You feel it in the buildings, the neighborhoods, and especially in places like traditional barbershops — spaces that have quietly served their communities for generations.

This barbershop sits just off the main road, easy to miss if you’re not paying attention. Inside, time slows down. The chairs are worn, the mirrors have seen decades of haircuts and conversations, and the rhythm of the shop feels unchanged by whatever year it happens to be outside.

This photograph is part of my ongoing Barbershops of America documentary project — a long-term effort to photograph traditional barbershops across all 50 states and preserve these spaces before they disappear.

A Traditional Barbershop in Birmingham’s Magic City

Birmingham is often called The Magic City, a nickname rooted in how quickly it grew during the industrial boom. But step into a barbershop like this one and you’re reminded that not everything moves fast here.

This is the kind of shop where:

  • Regulars don’t need to explain how they want their haircut

  • Conversations drift from local politics to college football to family stories

  • The barber knows everyone by name

There’s no rush. No appointment system. Just a steady flow of people who’ve been coming here for years — sometimes decades.

From a documentary photography standpoint, these details matter. They’re what separate a real working barbershop from a styled or recreated space. This shop isn’t a set. It’s lived-in.

Photographing Barbershop Culture in the American South

Southern barbershops have a distinct character. They’re often deeply rooted in their neighborhoods, serving as informal gathering places as much as businesses.

When I photograph barbershops like this one in Birmingham, I’m not trying to stage anything. The goal is to let the room speak for itself — the light, the posture of the barber, the way a customer settles into the chair.

The best moments usually happen quietly:

  • A glance in the mirror

  • A pause in conversation

  • The way afternoon light hits the floor

Those moments are what give barbershop photography its emotional weight. They’re small, but they’re honest.

Why Traditional Barbershops Matter

Across the country, independent barbershops are slowly disappearing — replaced by chains, salons, or modern storefronts designed to look old but lack history.

Projects like Barbershops of America exist to document what’s real before it’s gone.

These photographs are not nostalgic recreations. They’re records of working spaces:

  • Where generations of families have gotten their hair cut

  • Where stories are passed down as casually as advice

  • Where community still exists without needing a label

Birmingham’s barbershops are an important part of that story.

Part of the Barbershops of America Documentary Series

This Birmingham barbershop photograph is one piece of a much larger archive. Over the years, I’ve photographed traditional barbershops in cities, small towns, and rural communities across the United States.

The full project is available as:

  • A Barbershops of America photo book

  • Fine art photographic prints

  • Editorial and commercial licensing for publications, exhibitions, and design projects

Each shop adds another chapter to a disappearing part of American culture.

Stories From The Barbershop

It’s been interesting to see how some smaller cities have groupings of barbershops all in one place. Common sense would tell you that isn’t a great business strategy, but what do I know? Birmingham, Alabama is just such a place with multiple shops all on the same block, which was exciting but things didn’t start out so hot.

There was an older gentleman sitting out in front of the first shop I approached. He was talking on the phone while sitting on a stool in front of the door. I introduced myself and said that I’d like to make some photographs of the shop. Before I could even finish he said “I don’t have time”, turned his back to me, and continued his conversation. The shop was completely empty. I tried pushing back politely, stating that I’d been working on this project for 12+ years and published a book on traditional barbershops in all 50 states, etc, etc, etc. It didn’t work. He was angry that I was still standing there trying to talk with him and even more angry that I asked for the owner’s phone number. He wasn’t annoyed. He was angry almost to the point of aggression. Ah well. Can’t win them all. That led to a stop in Magic City Barbershop, which opened it’s doors in 1930! There is a poster on the front window from the Jefferson County Historical Commission that states so, but you don’t need a poster to tell you the place isn’t far off from its 100 year anniversary. You can just feel it.

The shop was empty besides the one barber working. He was a character. Had a witty answer for everything I said or asked.

Me: “Is this your shop?”

Him: “It ain’t yours!”

There were lots of old newspaper clippings on the wall of Martin Luther King and others from the riots and bombings. “Bombingham” as he called it, has a unique past that shaped it into the city it is today. Despite all the racial violence and negativity, it’s fascinating to be in that shop because the city’s history provides an education, experience, and conversation that you’re not likely to get anywhere else in the country. Barbershops provide an unorthodox way of learning about America!

Bringing Barbershop Photography Into Your Space

These photographs are often collected by:

  • Interior designers

  • Architects and creative offices

  • Hotels, restaurants, and barbershops

  • Private collectors interested in Americana and documentary photography

If you’re looking for artwork that feels authentic, grounded, and timeless, traditional barbershop photography offers a quiet strength that works across many environments.

Interested in These Photographs?

Fine art prints from this Birmingham barbershop series are available in multiple sizes and formats. Editorial and commercial licensing is also available.

Contact me here to discuss print options, licensing, or custom projects - rob@robhammerphotography.com

View More From the Barbershops of America Project

Another Barbershop Story

Barbershops of America Photography Gallery

Barbershop Photo Book/Prints

Photograph of barber in Birmingham, Alabama

Magic City Barbershop - Birmingham, Alabama

Photograph of sneakers and shoes for sale at a classic barbershop in Birmingham, Alabama

Sneakers for sale at a barbershop in Birmingham, Alabama

Photograph of a classic barbershop in Birmingham, Alabama

Traditional barbershop photography

Portrait of barber standing in front of his shop in Birmingham, Alabama

Portrait of a barber in Birmingham, Alabama

Montana Cowboy Photographs

Montana Cowboys through the Lens: Fine Art Prints of Grit, Sky & Tradition

Big Sky Moments & Cowboy Spirit—For Fans of Yellowstone and Real Ranch Life

When I pull up to a Montana ranch with a camera, I'm looking for more than a scene—I’m looking for something true. That first breath of morning air, the way the horizon stretches. Montana cowboys move quietly, with wear on their boots and stories in their hands. They don’t need an audience. Their work—reining, branding, riding out—isn’t performance, but it carries power anyway.

I shoot what feels real: cowboys leaning into saddle leather at sunrise, the sky turning cold and blue above mountain ridges, or riders rounding up cattle under heavy clouds. Moments like that—untouched, gritty, alive—feel like they echo what Yellowstone fans see onscreen: raw Western landscape, ranch life, sweeping skies, authenticity. The Chief Joseph Ranch in Darby plays the role of the Dutton Ranch in the show, but what draws me to Montana is seeing the same rhythm of life behind the scenes.

My prints are made from those moments. Limited edition, archival prints that hold light, dust, sky, and sweat. If you’ve ever watched Yellowstone, the beauty in close‑ups of ranch gear, the way a horse’s muscle works in motion, the golden glow on barn wood—these are the same details I chase. Montana isn’t just setting; it’s character.

Whether you want to hang a Montana cowboy print above a fireplace, in a lodge, or a room that tastes of the outdoors, there’s a piece here for you. A silhouette, a dusty trail, a cowboy’s hat brim catching last light—these aren’t just photographs. They’re windows into a life rooted in land, season, purpose.

Add Western Art to Your Space
Shop Cowboy Wall Art

Montana cowboy wall art

Montana cowboy wall art prints

Cowboy wall art for fans of Yellowstone

Western cowboy photography prints

Small Town North Carolina Barbershop

Granville Barbershop, North Carolina

A Traditional American Barbershop Documented Through Photography

The Granville Barbershop in Grannville, North Carolina is the kind of place that has quietly served its community for decades. No branding overhaul. No attempt to modernize what already works. Just a steady rhythm of haircuts, conversation, and routine that has outlasted trends and redevelopment cycles.

These photographs were made as part of my long-term documentary project, Barbershops of America — an ongoing effort to photograph traditional barbershops across the United States before they disappear. Shops like this are not just businesses; they are cultural fixtures that anchor small towns and neighborhoods.

Why Traditional Barbershops Matter

Traditional barbershops play a unique role in American life. They are spaces built on trust and repetition — places where people return month after month, year after year, to see the same barber in the same chair.

In small towns especially, barbershops function as informal community centers. News is exchanged. Silence is respected. Generations overlap. These are the kinds of everyday environments that rarely feel important in the moment, yet become deeply significant once they’re gone.

Photographing these spaces is about preservation, not nostalgia — recording them honestly, as they exist, without staging or intervention.

The Story

These photographs were made during a drive home to upstate NY for Christmas. The owner was very skeptical of my intentions at first but agreed to let me photograph his shop. During my time there I had some fun interactions with customers, but he never said much. As far as history goes, the shop opened in the 1940’s, and prior to that it was an African American movie theater!! How’s that for Southern?

As with most old shops, the relationship between proprietor and those in his chair was easy, fluid, and quite candid. At one point an older gentleman sauntered in with his head down, dropped a gift on an empty chair, turned back toward the door and said “well, gotta go”. That was it. No interaction. Never even lifted his head up to make eye contact. The barber didn’t seem surprised, nor did he skip a beat on the haircut in progress.

Took about a half hour until I was pleased with the pictures made. Afterward I gave the barber a card and thanked him for the hospitality. He stopped cutting, grabbed a few coins off the back bar, placed them in my hand and in an almost too good to be true accent said “take these two qwwwaaaaaaaatehs back to that machine and get you a pop. I’ll bet you haven’t had a 50 cent pop in yeeeeaaaaaaahs.” Sure enough, there were ice cold sodas coming out of a vintage Coca Cola machine against the back wall. Can’t tell you the last time I even had the desire for a soda, but I wasn’t about to turn that one down.

Interactions like these are what keep Barbershops of America going. Talking to people that give you a very definitive sense of place is gratifying, educational, and fun. Hearing about the shops history in such a dialect not only tells you where you are in the world, but also where you aren’t. I love that.

Continue exploring documentary barbershop photography in the Barbershops of America series

Barbershop Photography Gallery

Barbershop Photo Book/Prints

Another Barbershop Photo Essay

Contact me directly about barbershop photography licensing for your editorial and commercial projects -rob@robhammerphotography.com

Interior view of a traditional barbershop with barber chairs, mirrors, and military flags on the wall

The interior of Granville Barbershop reveals layers of personal history, from worn barber chairs to walls filled with service flags and memorabilia.

Traditional barbershop interior in North Carolina with a barber cutting a client’s hair using clippers

A working barber trims a longtime client inside a traditional North Carolina barbershop, where routine and familiarity define the space.

Exterior of Granville Barbershop in Granville, North Carolina with classic signage and storefront windows

The storefront of Granville Barbershop in Granville, North Carolina, a long-standing fixture of the town’s Main Street.

Documentary photograph of a barber cutting hair inside a small-town North Carolina barbershop

Inside the shop, haircuts continue as they have for decades—unhurried, familiar, and grounded in routine.

Detail photograph of a custom wooden walking stick resting beside a customer in a North Carolina barbershop

A handmade walking stick rests beside a customer, a small detail that hints at the personal histories carried into the shop.

East Coast Photography

Small Town America - Photography

Road Trip - American Culture

Cross country road trips have been a constant in my life for the past 12+ years, particularly in late December driving from San Diego, CA to upstate NY to visit family for Christmas. This year though, it was significantly shorter as we are currently living in North Carolina. If you want advice on the most soul sucking drive in the USA, it’s I95 from Raleigh to Albany. Avoid it at all costs. I did it once in a straight shot due to a severe lack of time and will never do it again. As a photographer you’re much better off committing to the many backroads that will get you to the same place while also delivering a much better experience. Here are a few images from PA and NY. Pennsylvania has always been a fascinating state. There is a sadness to a lot of the towns, particularly in the rust belt, but they are all undeniably American. Plenty of towns in America could be anywhere in America, but the majority of Pennsylvania makes you acutely aware that you are in a place.

Click here to see more of my American Photography

Union Cemetery - Hudson Falls, NY

Pittston, Pennsylvania

Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

Edwardsville, Pennsylvania

Pittston, Pennsylvania

Pittston, Pennsylvania

Hudson Falls, New York

Photographs of cowboys on the Diamond A Ranch - Arizona

Diamond A Ranch Cowboy Photography — Arizona Prints for Western Art Lovers

Diamond A Ranch isn’t just another western setting—it’s one of the largest and most storied ranches in Arizona, spanning 750,000 acres. What I love about photographing here is that each frame can feel both specific to Diamond A and universal to cowboy culture. It’s a place where light, land, horses, and human spirit intersect. I’ve been fortunate to visit the Diamond A a few times now and am proud to call a few of the cowboys my friends. As is the cowboy way, they are always generous with their hospitality and happy to have me around, given that I don’t get in the way of course.

For years, my American West / Cowboy Culture series has focused on capturing raw truth over staged scenes. At Diamond A, that means cowboys being cowboys - riding across wind‑sculpted sage, horses rounding in dust, corrals framed by expansive skies, and intimate gestures of work: stitching, saddling, rope swinging. I try to catch the moments that feel timeless.

These photographs are available as gallery‑quality prints for collectors, interior designers, and Western art enthusiasts. And for those needing images for publication, branding, or creative projects, licensing is available. I also accept commissioned shoots—whether for ranch projects, hospitality brands, or editorial features.

If you’re drawn to Western photography, cowboy imagery, or just the feeling of wide land and quiet grit, take a look at fine art print collection and reach out directly if you like to discuss licensing options - rob@robhammerphotography.com

Photograph print of two cowboys riding their horses along the rim of a canyon at sunrise in Arizona

Photograph of two cowboys riding horses at sunrise with a beautiful western scene behind them

Photograph of two cowboys roping a wild steer into a trailer on a cattle ranch in Arizona

Black and white photograph of two cowboys roping a wild steer

Black and white photograph of cowboys riding horses out into open range

Cowboys riding into open range on an Arizona cattle ranch

Photograph of a cowboy kid on a cattle ranch

Photograph of.a cowboy kid with blood covered hands

Authentic photograph of cowboys eating dinner in a bunkhouse on a cattle ranch in the American West

Photograph of cowboys eating dinner in a bunkhouse

Cowboys on the Diamond A Ranch

Photograph of wood cattle corrals in a Western landscape

Old wood cattle corrals on the Diamond A Ranch

Photograph of a cowboy catching horses in the traditional manner on a cattle ranch in Arizona

A cowboy catching horses in late afternoon light

Photograph of a cowboy saddling a horse early in the morning when the moon is still up

Photograph of a cowboy saddling his horse early in the morning on an Arizona cattle ranch

Black and white photograph of a cowboy walking out of an old wood building

Black and white photograph of.a cowboy coming out of an old wood saddle house

Photograph of two cowboys riding horses through steep rocky country  on a cattle ranch in Arizona

Photograph of two cowboy riding their horses through tough terrain in Arizona

Authentic photography print of two cowboys in a bunkhouse

Black and White photograph of two cowboys in a bunkhouse

Photograph of the sign for Rose Well on a gate at the Diamond A Ranch in Seligman, Arizona

Sign for the Rose Well camp on the Diamond A Ranch - Center of the Universe

Black and white photograph of cowboys fixing a broken gate

Cowboys repairing a broken gate on a cattle ranch

Photograph of the custom gate at a cattle ranch in Arizona

Pica Camp - Diamond A Ranch, Arizona

Photography Books - American Culture

American Photography - Documenting Traditional Barbershops

American photography as a genre is hard to define, especially when it comes to art collection and fine art photography. The term is so broad and leaves plenty of room for interpretation. One of my longest running series Barbershops of America fits into that category. Although it’s only been recently that I realized what’s been put together with this series is as much American photography as it is a historical document of a niche piece of American culture. And it occured to me the other day that getting a haircut is just a bonus to the experience you receive from being in a traditional barbershop. Grateful to see this project getting some exposure on Creative Boom and The Eye of Photography.

Click HERE to purchase a copy of Barbershops of American or HERE to purchase fine art prints.

Arizona Cattle Ranch

Cowboy Ranch Life in Arizona — A Working Ranch Photo Essay

Photographing a Working Cattle Ranch in Rural Arizona

Arizona ranching doesn’t look the way most people imagine it. There are no dramatic mountain backdrops or postcard moments waiting around every corner. Most days are quiet. Dry. Spread out. The work blends into the land in a way that feels almost invisible unless you slow down enough to notice it.

These photographs were made on a working cattle ranch in rural Arizona. No staging. No recreations. Just day-to-day ranch life as it happens — early mornings, long distances, and a rhythm that hasn’t changed much because it doesn’t need to.

Ranch work in Arizona is shaped by the environment more than anything else. The land dictates the pace. Heat, dust, and long distances through dense brush are part of every decision, and nothing happens quickly unless it has to. You feel that right away when you’re there.

What struck me most wasn’t any single moment, but how steady everything felt. Horses saddled without ceremony. Gates opened and closed out of habit. Work done without commentary. It’s not dramatic, but it’s real — and that’s what makes it worth photographing.

Ranching in Arizona Isn’t Romantic — It’s Practical

A lot of imagery of the American West leans hard into nostalgia. This place doesn’t ask for that. Ranching here is practical and stripped down. The landscape doesn’t allow for much excess.

The cattle are moved when they need to be moved. The horses are tools as much as companions. There’s very little separation between work and daily life, and no sense that anyone is trying to preserve an image for the sake of outsiders. It simply exists.

That honesty is what drew me to photograph here.

The K4 Ranch

The photographs in this series were made at K4 Ranch, a working cattle operation where ranching still follows the land rather than trends. Like many ranches across Arizona, it operates quietly, without much outside attention, doing the same work it has for generations.

Places like this don’t always make headlines, but they form the backbone of ranching culture in the Southwest. They’re also disappearing faster than most people realize.

Why Photograph Places Like This

I’ve spent years photographing working cowboys and ranches across the American West, and the more time I spend in places like this, the more important it feels to slow down and document them honestly.

Not to turn them into symbols — but to show what’s actually there.

These photographs aren’t meant to romanticize ranch life or explain it. They’re simply a record of people working, land being used, and traditions continuing without much concern for being noticed.

Arizona Cowboy Photography Prints

Photographs from this Arizona ranching series are available as museum-quality fine art prints. Each print is produced in small editions and made to live with — not just be scrolled past.

View available cowboy photography prints

This story is also part of a larger, ongoing project documenting real working cowboys and ranch life across the American West.

View the complete cowboy photography gallery

Photograph of a revolver gun in the console of a cowboy's pickup truck

A cowboy’s revolver

Black and white photograph of husband and wife cowboys

Brady and Marianne Clark - Cowboys

Early morning light illuminates corrals on a working ranch in Arizona

Horse corrals on the K4 Ranch in Prescott Arizona

Black and white photograph of a cowboy on an Arizona cattle ranch

Brady Clark - Cowboy

Photograph of a bucket of horseshoes on a cattle ranch in Arizona

Photograph of used horseshoes sitting in a bucket on a cattle ranch in Arizona

Photograph of a cowboy riding through thick brush on an Arizona cattle ranch

Cowboy riding through thick brush

Cowboy lariats hanging on a cattle skull on a working ranch in Arizona

Ropes from King’s Saddlery hang on a cow skull on the K4 Ranch in Prescott, Arizona

Photograph of a working Arizona cowgirl on her horse in a thick forest

Working Arizona cowgirl - Marianne Clark

Photograph of a cowboys roping dummy

Photograph of a roping dummy on a cattle ranch in the American West

Rick and Sarah Kieckhefer - owners of the largest cattle ranch in the Southwest United States

Rick and Sarah Kieckhefer - Arizona cattle ranchers

Photographs of a cowboys horse shoeing station on a Arizona cattle ranch

A cowboy’s shoeing station for his horse on a cattle ranch in Arizona

Black and white photograph of male and female cowboys mounting horses in Arizona

Arizona cowboys getting on their horses before a day of work

Black and white photograph of a cowgirl feeding horses on a beautiful cattle ranch

Cowgirl feeding horses

A cowboy riding his horse an an Arizona cattle ranch

Horses running free on an Arizona cattle ranch

A cowgirl puts her world champion saddle back in the saddle house on a cattle ranch

World Champion Cowgirl

Photograph of a cowboy saddling his horse on the K4 Ranch in Prescott, Arizona

Saddling a horse on the K4 Ranch in Prescott, AZ

Photograph of an Arizona cowgirl riding her horse through dense forest

Arizona cowgirl riding her horse through rough forest

Photograph of a three legged cattle dog

3 legged cattle dog

Barbershop Photography

Traditional American Barbershops

One of the best/hardest parts of working on long term projects focused on one subject matter is the bar is always rising. And that has definitely been the case for Barbershops of America. Traditional shops are a dying breed as is, and after seeing countless shops (good and bad) over the past 10 years, I’ve become quite specific about which shops I want to include in this project. Despite lots of travel and searching for shops over the past year+, the efforts have been fruitless, finding almost nothing worthy of documentation. Sort of hard to believe, actually. Searching for that long without positive results can make you think hard about the project. Is it done? Have I truly found and photographed all the remaining traditional barbershops in America? All of that doubt was erased recently after finding two incredible shops. Nicholson’s Barbershop in Raleigh, NC has been around for 40 years and Patsy’s Barbershop in Albany, NY first opened its doors in 1930! I was born in Albany, lived nearby for 25 years, have been going back at least twice a year for the past 18 years, and just last week discovered Patsy’s. Even more strange, the current owner is a former bouncer that used to, for good reason, throw my friends and I out of the bar. Funny how life works.

Click here to purchase a copy of Barbershops of America

The best barbershop in Raleigh, North Carolina

Nicholson’s Barbershop - Raleigh, North Carolina

Photograph of a barber's hands
Photograph of a traditional barbershop in Raleigh, North Carolina
The best barbershop in Albany, NY

Patsy’s Barbershop - Albany, NY

Photograph of a beautiful traditional barbershop in Albany, NY

Traditional barbershop in Albany, NY


Boots O'Neal

Boots O’Neal - Cowboy - 6666 Ranch - Texas

Being a photographer has been a great pleasure and an even greater adventure. It’s taken me to some outstanding parts of the earth and allowed me to photograph some of the most famous athletes on it. “Who is your favorite?”, has always been a common question. Until recently that was an impossible question to answer. Now my final is abundantly clear - it’s the legendary Texas cowboy Boots O’Neal. Boots is a 90 year old cowboy on the iconic 6666 Ranch. A more inspiring human you will not meet. To learn more about him continue reading this piece I wrote that was originally published with Wrangler.

View More Cowboy Photography From The American West

Tom Moorhouse - Texas Cowboy

Fine Art Cowboy Prints

Branding Season at the 6666 Ranch

The photographs above are just one piece of a much larger story. Branding season at the 6666 Ranch is a coordinated effort and well oiled machine run by first class cowboys.

→ See the complete 6666 Ranch branding photo series

Photograph of legendary Texas cowboy Boots O'Neal on the 6666 Ranch

Boots O’Neal on his horse working cattle in the corrals at the 6666 Ranch

Boots O’Neal and the Tradition of Ranching in West Texas

Imagine for a moment, waking up in the hospital with 12 broken ribs, a punctured lung, broken vertebrae, and a bleeding brain. Now imagine that pain at 82 years of age. Cal Ripken Jr. was Major League Baseball's “Ironman”. Earning the nickname after playing 2,632 consecutive games. Put those end to end and you’ve got over 7 years of straight baseball. An astonishing stat and impressive feat only possible for a human made from the toughest stock. No offense to Mr. Ripken, but that doesn’t hold a candle to the Texas legend - Boots O’Neal, who's been horseback for the better part of the last 75 years. Despite the aforementioned injuries, piled on a lifetime of other broken body parts, the now 90 year old cowboy shows no desire whatsoever to retire. You’d think someone that’s lived in such a way would have a face much resembling their saddle that’s endured as many miles. Instead, O’Neal’s is endearing, and fixed with a perpetual smile that causes you to do the same. The kind of guy that inadvertently makes you a better person just by being in his presence. 

While we’re on the stat train, let’s dole out a few more just to drive the point home, what an outlier he truly is. The average retirement age in America is 62. The average age of death is 78. And a cowboy will normally take home about $31,466 a year. At a time in life when most folks are either dead or in a nursing home, Boots wakes up every morning with excitement to saddle a horse and work cattle alongside fellow cowpunchers that could be his grandkids. People just aren’t built like him anymore. Not a partier, but it would be safe to put O’Neal in the Keith Richards class. Immortal freaks, in the most beautiful way possible. 

Portrait of Boots O'Neal - Cowboy on the 6666 Ranch in Texas. Available as a photography print.

Portrait of Boots O’Neal

Cowboys in general are a strand of human unlike the rest of us. Born not made. And from birth, it was obvious O’Neal created a category all his own. Growing up in the 30’s he was one of 8 children living in a home without running water. The bathroom was an outhouse, and the bath, a tub filled with water and placed next to the kitchen oven, door open for heat. After 3 or 4 of the kids took their turn, that water was tossed outside to calm down the dust. He was never much for school. The only thing he excelled at was boxing, but usually just looked forward to running off the bus and into the barn to saddle a horse, only coming in when his mother hung a white sheet on the clothesline - their version of a dinner bell. 9th grade was as far as he cared to go, leaving home in August of 49’ at sixteen to cowboy for the JA ($90/week). That job found him on the wagon, sleeping in only a bedroll 6-7 months at a time. A lifestyle that fit him just fine. 

Before we go any further, it would be appropriate to define what makes a real cowboy. The loud mouth sporting a big black hat getting in drunken bar fights makes for good movies, but that’s about it. According to the man himself, a real cowboy is polite. Smooth. Talks gentlemanly to ladies and is good under fire. Dusty Burson (32) - foreman on the Four Sixes and close friend to Mr. O’Neal said it best - “What’s a cowboy? Well, they’re good people. Honest. They do what they say they’re gonna do. If they tell you they’ll be there to help, they’ll be there, and they’ll stay to the end.” If that statement made its way into Websters, the following words should read “also see Boots O’Neal”. 

Photograph of Boots O'Neal branding calves on the 6666 Ranch in Texas. Available for editorial and commercial licensing.

Boots O’Neal branding calves in the early morning on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Photograph of a famous Texas cowboy

Boots O’Neal’s custom spurs

After the JA, he continued punching cows in different places including a quarter century stay at the Waggoner Ranch. All the while racking up a collection of buckles and saddles from bronc riding in rodeos all over the country. Word is he’s still pretty sticky. A wife (Nelda) also came into the mix as did a daughter (Laurie). Despite being opposites, Boots and Nelda remained in love for 44 years until her passing. She was a proper lady that enjoyed being in town but fully supported his innate need for open country. As their relationship grew, his career did along with it. The 50’s’ found him in Korea with the Army, where he stared out at vast foreign valleys, daydreaming about them filled with 1000 steer, and wondering why in the world they didn’t have any. After two years he was back on a ranch working hard to become a Peace Office and Brand Inspector at a time when cattle were still shipped by railroad. Along with the coveted title came a doubled salary, new clothes, fancy truck, and expense account. A novelty quickly erased by jealousy every time business on a ranch forced him to watch cowboys ride away on horses while he sat in a truck headed back to the office. “I just wanted to punch cows” he said. So he gave back a job that most in the industry would kill for and reclaimed his true love, working cattle from the back of a horse. 

Love is what it takes because the life of a cowboy asks a lot of a person, physically and emotionally. “ Even when I know tomorrow is gonna be a bad deal, and they’re predicting snow, and the wind coming out of the north blowing, and we’re gonna ride straight into it in the morning, I just look forward to getting out there and freezing my tail off” says O’Neal. How many 90 year olds have you ever heard say something like that? Burson again offers some insight - “he wakes up thinking I’m going to be happy today. He doesn’t let circumstances dictate happiness.” Dusty was the one who found the 82 year old O’Neal alone in a pasture, after the horse wreck that would have ended any mortal man. Even if it didn’t put him in the ground, the pain alone would cause a rational person to take a brush with death as a sign and say, ok, it’s been a good run. Burson visited him in the hospital shortly after and recalled the nurse asking why he kept lifting his left leg up in the air. Obviously, it was to keep the mobility of toeing a stirrup. “That’s how bad he wants to be a cowboy when he grows up” says Burson. 6 weeks later, he was back on that same horse and continues riding him today.  

Black and white photograph of Boots O'Neal and Charlie Ferguson talking in the chuck wagon tent on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal talks with chuck wagon cook Charlie Ferguson on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Seems like it came naturally for Boots, but don’t get it twisted, any good cowboy is a student of the trade. Always figuring out a way to get it done better without asking for recognition. All of the best cowboys Boots ever knew and patterned himself after, accomplished unthinkable feats even Taylor Shariden couldn’t script, in the middle of nowhere with only a few people to witness. Another friend and Texas icon Tom Moorehouse (72) is quick to point out “I’ve known Boots almost all my life, and anything I’ve got to say about him is good”. From the outside you might think that cowboying is a physical game. Only for the young. Not so. Sure, you need the gumption to handle extreme physical abuse and relentless weather that doesn’t end after an eight hour shift. But Moorehouse says the thing that separates Boots from the rest is that he’s a “keen observer”. He continues “my dad used to say a real cowboy is somebody that pays attention. Now that doesn’t sound like a good story, but that’s the truth.” There is so much that can go wrong when you’re working with 2,000+lb animals and navigating remote unforgiving terrain. One mistake could mean the end. 

We’ve already established that Boots is an enigma, but for arguments sake, let’s say he got lucky? Somehow the body that’s been broken more times than anyone can count, managed to miss the big one. Even with luck, longevity like his doesn’t just happen. And living on a wagon, eating ranch food, wouldn’t make any blueprint for “healthy living”. Cowboys require hearty meals to get them through their overly demanding lives. So It should be no surprise that beef has made its way to Boots’ plate just about every day for the past 90 years. Along with the beef came biscuits, gravy, and potatoes. Breakfast was peanut butter and syrup sandwiches. All of which goes against everything you’ll read from the so-called nutrition experts. Although pinto beans, prunes, and raisins are foods he now tries to consume regularly along with said beef. The fresh fruit and vegetables he also concentrates on just wasn’t a thing back then.”It wasn’t until I got up in years that I ever worried about putting something bad in my body.”  A chuckle was the only answer given when asked about exercise, but “I’ve never been short on sleep” says O’Neal. Which he believes has been the holy grail to his success. For as long as he can remember, even as a young buck, he’d turn in early, ensuring 8-9 hours of shuteye every night. These days he says “it takes me longer to rest than it does to get tired”, but it becomes obvious shortly after meeting him, that modesty is one of his many virtues. He’ll try and claim that he can’t do this, that, or the other. Then he slips into the saddle and the truth is revealed. “It takes a whole crew to keep me going”, he says. Again, modesty perfected. Perhaps his days aren’t spent aboard wild broncs, but he always gets the job done with grace, and his expertise couldn’t be matched anywhere in the world. Ironic for a guy who’s never considered himself very smart. What Boots has can’t be taught. He’s got a PHD in punching cows. Anybody will tell you he’s on the Mount Rushmore of the cowboy universe, but who the hell else could be up there with him? Is there another human that’s punched cows for almost 8 decades?  “It’s amazing what all he’s got stored up inside him that someone oughta have recorded” Dusty says. A lot of people with such knowledge and history can become high and mighty. Not Boots. He’ll let you mess up, then suggest, in a non degrading way, how to do it better. He knows we’re all in this thing together.

Photograph of the famous Texas cowboy Boot O'Neal

Boots O’Neal offloading his horse from a trailer on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Photograph of Boots O'Neal dragging a calf to the fire for branding on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal roping calves on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

If you think about the human condition and what we’re all after, one of the key ingredients is professional happiness. Everyone wants to spend their waking hours doing something they love. Why is that goal so elusive, so rare? A million dollar question. Even harder than finding that happiness, is keeping it. Somehow Boots O’Neal has managed to do it at one of the most physically demanding jobs on the planet and continues today at a very high level. Maybe the how doesn’t really matter. Maybe we should just use Boots as inspiration to be better humans. The iconic Four Sixes has been his home for the past 26 years. Panhandle, Texas is the closest town to their northern division where we met. The town sign fittingly reads “People of Pride and Purpose”. Just like the dictionary, there might as well be a picture of Boots next to that slogan. He figured IT out and still can’t get enough. He doesn’t need to work in a monetary sense. He wants to work, although it’d be a stretch to hear him use a four letter word like that. Even on a rare day off, he doesn’t look forward to a hobby or a vacation. Instead he’ll watch a rodeo on television or sit in a chair outside his bunkhouse apartment to watch the remuda come in. A sight he says, of 50 horses all running together, is one that most people will never get to see. Bob Dylan wrote a song on this very topic using only 17 words:  

“All the tired horses in the sun…..”

The guy has done it all, taken the beatings, and asked for more. He’s been inducted into every Hall of Fame a cowpuncher could possibly be associated with. Somehow that doesn’t seem enough of an honor though. Boots should be everyone's hero. He’s a national treasure and outstanding human being.  We should all strive to accomplish in our own lives what he has in his. Burson says “Yeah, he’s a cowboy, but he wants to be one tomorrow too”. If more people had that attitude, the world would be a better place. 

We were just about done talking when Boots’ story paused abruptly . A mischievous smile came to his face and the words stopped flowing. His attention fixed on one of the guys in a nearby corral working a young horse that was fixing to blow up. The grin stayed as he reminisced “I rode a lot of bucking horses in years past. I could get on a horse like that, just gather that thing up, and he’d be 3 feet in the air when I got that right stirrup”. Boots is a Christian. If he weren’t, and followed a religion believing in reincarnation, he says that’s what he’d want to come back as, a bucking horse. At 90 years young he knows precisely how good his life has been and isn’t scared of the inevitable. In a very matter of fact way he spoke about his funeral, being buried in the cemetery on the Four Sixes, and the speech by his friend Joe Leathers. When asked what he hopes Joe will say, Boots paused then replied humbly with a far off stare ”He was an honorable man. Done what he said he would. And didn’t mistreat his horses” 

Portrait of Boots O'Neal the famous Texas cowboy

Portrait of Boots O’Neal

Silhouette of a cowboy on his horse at sunrise on a cattle ranch in Texas

Boots O’Neal on his horse at sunrise on the 6666 Ranch in Texas

Boots O'Neal
from $900.00

Vietnamese Basketball Photographs

Vietnam Basketball Hoops

Street Courts, Local Culture, and Basketball Photography from Vietnam

Basketball is often thought of as an American export — born in a Massachusetts gymnasium in 1891 and carried outward through schools, cities, and eventually professional leagues around the world. While traveling through Vietnam, I was struck by how naturally the game has taken root there, not as a spectacle, but as part of everyday life.

Across cities, towns, and quieter neighborhoods, basketball hoops appear in unexpected places: schoolyards, narrow streets, open courtyards, and community spaces where the game feels woven into the rhythm of daily life. This series documents basketball hoops in Vietnam as quiet markers of a global sport adapting to a local landscape.

Basketball Culture in Vietnam

Basketball in Vietnam doesn’t announce itself loudly. It exists alongside scooters, street vendors, and the constant motion of city life. In larger cities like Ha Noi, formal courts sit beside improvised spaces where a single hoop is enough to gather players at dusk. The game is played casually — pickup runs, after-school games, and neighborhood meetups — less about structure and more about presence.

What stood out most was how accessible basketball felt. You didn’t need a gym or a polished court. A hoop mounted to a wall or standing alone on cracked pavement was enough. These small courts and informal hoops reflect how basketball culture adapts when it travels — shaped by space, environment, and community rather than uniform design.

Vietnam Basketball Hoops as Photographic Subjects

As a photographer, basketball hoops have long fascinated me as cultural objects. In Vietnam, they become especially compelling. The hoops themselves often show signs of wear — rusted rims, faded backboards, uneven surfaces — but they feel purposeful, still actively used and cared for.

Photographing these hoops wasn’t about action or athletic performance. Instead, it was about the spaces around them: the architecture, the light, the way people move through the frame even when they aren’t playing. These images sit somewhere between travel photography, documentary work, and fine art basketball photography.

Each hoop tells a quiet story about place. They suggest where kids gather after school, where communities overlap, and how a global sport finds a local expression far from its origins.

Street Basketball Courts in Ha Noi and Beyond

Many of the basketball hoops in this series were photographed in and around Ha Noi, where dense urban neighborhoods create intimate court environments. Others were found while traveling through smaller towns and less-touristed areas, where hoops feel more isolated — standing alone in open spaces, waiting for players to return.

These locations reveal a side of Vietnam that isn’t always highlighted in travel photography. Basketball courts become landmarks, offering insight into daily routines rather than postcard views. They act as subtle entry points into understanding local culture through sport.

A Global Game, Seen Through Travel Photography

Basketball’s global reach is often discussed in terms of professional leagues and international competition. What interests me more are these quieter expressions — the places where the game exists without spectacle.

This project fits within my larger body of work documenting basketball hoops across different regions, from small towns in the United States to international locations like Vietnam. In each place, the hoop remains recognizable, but the environment reshapes its meaning.

Vietnam basketball hoops feel rooted, practical, and alive. They are not nostalgic relics, but active participants in daily life.

Prints and Licensing

These photographs are part of an ongoing documentary and fine art series exploring basketball culture through place.
Fine art prints of select images from this Vietnam basketball hoops series are available for collectors, and the work is also available for editorial and commercial licensing.

If you’re interested in prints, licensing, or learning more about this project, feel free to get in touch.

More Basketball Stories From Around The World

European Basketball - Basketball hoops photographed across European cities and small towns, showing how the game lives far beyond its American roots.

American Basketball - A long-term photography project documenting old and handmade basketball hoops found throughout the United States.

Hoop Prints - Select basketball hoop photographs available as fine art prints for collectors and interior spaces.

Photograph of a colorful basketball hoop in Vietnam

Vietnamese basketball hoop

Photograph of a primitive basketball hoop in  Ha Noi, Vietnam

Basketball hoop in Ha Noi, Vietnam

Photograph of a Vietnamese basketball hoop

Hoi An, Vietnam basketball hoop

Old basketball hoop in Vietnam

Basketball court in Vietnam

Photograph of a basketball court at a school in Vietnam

Colorful basketball court at a school in Vietnam

Black and white photograph of a basketball hoop in Vietnam

Black and white photograph of a Vietnamese basketball hoop

Basketball hoop in a small Vietnamese town

Photograph of an old basketball hoop at a school in a small Vietnamese town

Road Trip Photography Book

The Open Road -

Photography and the Great American Road Trip

Results for the American Photography 39 Competition are in and filled with a massive amount of incredible images from so many photographer that I look up to. So it’s a real honor having two of my images from Roadside Meditations be a part of it.

Roadside Meditations

Road Trip Photo Book

American Road Trip Photography Book

Hanoi, Vietnam Photography

Hanoi, Vietnam Street Photography

Available for editorial and commercial licensing

Hanoi has an energy that gets under your skin. The streets are alive with movement — motorbikes weaving through alleys, kids chasing each other between fruit stands, vendors setting up shop on the sidewalk like it’s the most natural thing in the world. Every corner has its own rhythm, and walking with a camera feels like stepping into a never-ending stream of stories.

I carried one body and one lens, and let that limitation push me into seeing differently. Some moments you catch, others slip away, but that’s the beauty of street work. It’s fast, unpredictable, and brutally honest. These frames from Hanoi are part of a larger body of travel work I’ve been building, and they’re available for editorial and commercial licensing.

Why Photograph Hanoi This Way

I wanted to keep it simple — one lens, one perspective. The city doesn’t need much help telling its own story. Life spills out everywhere: coffee brewed streetside, scooters stacked three deep at stoplights, laundry hanging above sidewalks. Photographing it felt less about finding “shots” and more about staying open long enough to let them find me.

Street Life and Daily Rhythm

Markets buzzing before sunrise, old men playing checkers on plastic stools, women carrying baskets balanced across their shoulders — Hanoi’s everyday life has a timeless quality. These photographs are less about the place on a map and more about the pulse of human movement.

Licensing Use Cases

These images are available for:

  • Travel and culture magazine features

  • Editorial stories on Southeast Asia and Vietnam

  • Commercial campaigns for tourism, hospitality, and lifestyle brands

  • Website or social content for companies wanting authentic imagery from Hanoi

Licensing Information

Each project is unique. I offer a range of options — from single-use editorial licenses to commercial rights packages — depending on how the images will be used. If you’re working on a story, campaign, or brand project and need photographs of Hanoi street life, I’d be glad to put something together for you.

The streets of Hanoi have a way of pulling you in. They’re noisy and chaotic, but at the same time full of small, quiet moments worth holding onto. That’s what I wanted these photographs to be — honest reflections of a place in motion.

If you’d like to license these images, or discuss a project that needs photography in this part of the world, reach me directly at rob@robhammerphotography.com..

Hanoi, Vietnam street photography available for editorial and commercial licensing

Hanoi, Vietnam street photography

Stock photograph of a street food vendor in Hanoi, Vietnam
Hanoi, Vietnam street culture photography - Travel

The streets of Hanoi, Vietnam

Photograph of chickens in a cage on the street before being killed for serving in a street restaurant

Caged chickens at a restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam

Stock photograph of a woman cleaning chickens on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

A woman preparing dead chickens to cook at a restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam

Photograph of various fried fish for sale on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Fish for sale on the street in Vietnam

Photograph of various shellfish for sale on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Shellfish for sale on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Photograph of a woman selling fruit on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Stock photograph of a woman selling watermelons on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Stock photograph of man and his shoe repair station on the street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Shoe repairman on the street in Vietnam

Hanoi, Vietnam street scene photograph

Stock travel photography of Hanoi, Vietnam

Fresh eggs hanging on a motor bike on the streets of Hanoi, Vietnam

Hanoi, Vietnam Street Photography available for editorial and commercial licensing

Textile vendor - Hanoi, Vietnam

Stock photograph of the world famous "Train Street" in Hanoi, Vietnam. Available for editorial and commercial licensing

Train Street in Hanoi, Vietnam

Stock photograph of a woman's bike in Hanoi, Vietnam stacked with fruits and vegetables

A Vietnamese woman carrying food on her bicycle to sell on the streets of Hanoi

Cowboy Photography - American West

Western Cowboy Photography

Photographing cowboys in the American West has been so many adjectives. Just scrolling through images to make this blog post gives me even more appreciation for the work, life, and culture of these people. As of this writing I’ve been lucky to photograph on cattle ranches in Nevada, California, Texas, Arizona, Idaho, and Wyoming. Which has been an education in and of itself, seeing all the differences from region to region. Not sure how long thing has been going on no, but the desire to continue only grows with each ranch visited. Certainly my favorite project to date.

Click here to see more of my cowboy photography and contact me directly to purchase wall art from the American Cowboy series. All of my images are available as prints for your home, office, or commercial space.

Sunrise photograph of two saddled horses with pogonip in the background

Fulstone Ranch - Bridgeport, California

Black and white portrait of a Wyoming cowboy

Dave Ennis - Wyoming Cowboy

Photograph of a cowboy working cattle in a chute

Diamond A Ranch - Seligman, Arizona

Photograph of the clutter in a cowboys office in Idaho

Cowboy “Office” - Idaho

Photograph of Dwight Hill - Idaho cowboys

Dwight Hill - Buckaroo - Idaho

Black and white photograph of cowboys riding out into open range

Diamond A Ranch - Seligman, Arizona

Photograph of Dwight Hill practicing with his horse in Idaho

Dwight Hill - Buckaroo -Idaho

American West Photography

Cowboy Photography

It’s always great to get press on your work, especially when it’s a big outlet like the Daily Mail. If you want to go on “followers’, they come in at 22+million on Facebook, whatever that means. Either way, I’m honored to have them do a feature on my cowboy photography - a project I love. It’s also quite young compared to some of the others like Barbershops of America or American Backcourts, which have both been going on now for ten years!

Click here to see more of my cowboy photography. Or contact me directly if you’re looking Western prints / wall art for your home, office, or commercial space.

Basketball In Winter

Basketball Culture Photography

Basketball Art Prints - Winter

The other day I received a basketball image request from a client which caused me to dig through the archives of the American Backcourts series. It was staggering to see how many images I’ve made of basketball hoops all over this country. The digging also brought up a lot of good memories that were a great reminder of why the series still continues today. The images you see here are from this past winter in California and Wyoming.

Contact me directly about fine art basketball hoop prints for your home, office, or commercial space - rob@robhammerphotography.com

Basketball Hoop - Freedom, Wyoming

Mammoth, California

Mammoth, California

Mammoth, California

Road Trip Photos - USA

Photography and the Great American Road Trip

Road Trip Photo Book

It’s a good thing most people only think of Las Vegas when Nevada gets brought up. Otherwise it gets thrown into the “fly over state” category. Staying that way would be just fine. The hoards can go elsewhere and leave the untamed beauty to the rest of us that truly appreciate it. Of the states many redeeming qualities, under populated ranks very high on the list. I’d argue it has everything, but that’s an obvious bias. The biggest draw is almost endless open roads, which is why it fits so nicely for my Roadside Meditations series. One of those places that really allows your mind to wander. Beyond that, it’s got sage brush, deserts, mountains, snowboarding, fly fishing, and cattle ranches. What more does a guy need? All joking aside, Nevada is a really special place. Another one that took me a while to understand or appreciate, but now the hooks are firmly planted. Desert mornings and evenings offer a vibe you can’t find elsewhere. It’s something about the light mixed with the color palette and textures of the landscape. I’ve spent many a night sleeping in my truck in Nevada, waking up to sunrises that rival any in the country.

Click here to pick up a copy of Roadside Meditations

Contact me directly about American road trip photography prints for your home, office, or commercial space - rob@robhammerphotography.com

Desert road near Goodsprings Nevada - American Road Trip Photography - Rob Hammer

Goodsprings, Nevada - Road Trip Photography

Desert road near Goodsprings, Nevada - American Road Trip Photography

Goodsprings, Nevada - American Road Trip

Jean, Nevada -Photography - American Road Trip

Jean, Nevada - Road Trip Photography

Hawthorne, Nevada Photo - American Road Trip

Hawthorne, Nevada - American Road Trip Photography

Sandy Valley, Nevada - American Road Trip Photography

Sandy Valley, Nevada - Travel Photography - America

Sandy Valley, Nevada - Road Trip- American

Sandy Valley, Nevada - Road Trip Photo Book

Walker Lake, Nevada - American Road Trip Photography

Walker Lake, Nevada - American Photography

Hawthorne, Nevada - American Road Trip Photography - Rob Hammer

American Road Trip Photography

Gardnerville, Nevada Carson Valley Photo

Carson Valley, Nevada - American Photography

Driving Through America

American Road Trip Photography

More from the road this winter. You never know what you’ll find out there, which is most of the draw. If you knew, what fun would it be? That’d be like fly fishing if you were guaranteed a catch every single time out. It’s about the hunt. The coyote image is a great example how the road always keeps you guessing. I only found them because of a pee break on the side of some desert parking lot in the middle of the Nevada desert. Parking lot is the only word available, because it didn’t seem a need for one. There was nothing around for miles and miles. Nevada desert. Which begs the question, why were the coyotes there? Clearly they were killed by hunters and placed carefully in that spot. It took effort to drag them from the kill location. Why not just leave them there? We’ll never know. Nor does it matter. Just the kind of thing you see on the road.

Click here to see more of my America series

Dave's Pubb - Tetonia, Idaho - dive bar - photo - America

Dave’s Pubb - Tetonia, Idaho

Photograph of the Lovelock Speedway - Lovelock, Nevada

Lovelock Speedway - Lovelock, Nevada

Dead coyotes in the Nevada desert -photo

Nevada desert

Mojave, California Photo Train Windfarm

Mojave, California

Hawthorne, Nevada - movie theater - photo

Hawthorne, Nevada

Frames Magazine

Photography Podcast - Frames Magazine

It’s rewarding connecting with people that you’re on the same page with. The motto at Frames Magazine is “Because excellent photography belongs on paper”. For quite some time I’ve been saying that photography belongs on your wall, not your phone. So you can see the natural connection to the people at Frames. They get it. So I was honored to be interviewed about Roadside Meditations by W. Scott Olsen for their podcast. Scott is as talented a photographer as he is an interviewer and writer. If you’re into long form photo essays about travel, check out the piece he did on traveling the country by train - Scenes From a Moving Window . It’s a lot of fun. Here is a link to my episode on the Frames Photography Podcast.

And here is a link to purchase Roadside Meditations

Road Trip

Road Trip Photographer - America - Open Road

What a winter it’s been. The snow just keeps on coming. Made an impromptu road trip up to Jackson Hole again for a mix of business and pleasure. More on the business part coming soon! We had two days of incredible backcountry snowboarding. The best of which was in Grand Teton National Park, where the snow was literally as good as it gets. Felt like floating on a cloud. The road trip portion was a lot of fun too, although the weather conditions made it quite interesting. On the way south while driving through northern Nevada, an emergency alert popped up on my phone. I figured it was just an overreaction, then got slammed with some of the worst driving conditions I’ve ever witnessed during 10+ years of road trips. The snow and wind was so heavy, that there were moments when I couldn’t figure out if the car was moving forward or backwards. It was also the first time I ever called it and got a hotel due to weather. That hour and a half of driving in those conditions completely fried my eyes and brain. Gotta love the road. It keeps you honest. Will be posting new images soon from the cowboy project.

The American Road Trip - Photo Book

Photographing the American Road Trip

Photo Book - Americana - Open Road

Very happy to see Roadside Meditations is being received so well over in Europe. LF Magazine did a feature on it, which you can use Google Translate to read HERE.

Or click here to purchase a copy of my book on American Road Trip Photography - Roadside Meditations

LF Magazine - Spain - Roadside Meditations - Rob Hammer - Fine art photography book

American Road Trip Photo Book