I thought I would dive into stories from my recent travels by sharing some Black & White photos I took in Taos, New Mexico on the 3rd day of our 4-day Colorado to New Mexico roadtrip at the end of May/start of June.
Taos, New Mexico was just screaming for me to pull out my smartphone camera and take photos in B&W, with it’s adobe structures and clear blue skies punctuated with a little cloud here and there.
I’ve loved the work of the photographer Ansel Adams since I was a teenager and while much “cooler” teenagers had posters of the latest “teen idol” on their walls, I had several Ansel Adams posters. I’ve also loved the work of the painter Georgia O’Keeffe (who lived in New Mexico) since I was in my early 20’s and I used to have several Georgia O’Keeffe posters in my room when I was in college (I was fortunate to visit the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum on a trip to Santa Fe, New Mexico 6 years ago, see post Creative Inspiration: Georgia O’Keeffe Museum).
Well our first tourist stop in Taos, NM was the adobe San Francisco de Asís Mission Church at the Ranchos de Taos, which was built 1813 – 1815 and was photographed by Ansel Adams AND painted by Georgia O’Keeffe!
Here is the Ansel Adams photograph “Church Taos Pueblo 1942” courtesy of fineartamerica.com:

Here is the Georgia O’Keeffe painting “Ranchos Church” courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art‘s website:
And here are my photos:
Yup, Mr. Ansel Adams is probably rolling his eyes from the afterlife on my B&W photographs; but I had fun taking them and pretending I understood composition and all those other mystical photograph taking terms – ha!
No I didn’t attempt to paint it like Georgia O’Keeffe did!
Ok so you might notice the church Ansel Adams photographed in the 1930s looks different than the one I photographed in 2024. According to Wikipedia the church has gone through several restorations over the years (we are talking 90+ years between Mr. Adams’ photo and mine) and the article on San Francisco de Asís Mission Church verifies it was photographed by Ansel Adams and painted by Georgia O’Keeffe. (But if you discover my research is wrong, let me know in the comments.)
Here are some other B&W photos I took in Taos. I was fascinated by the old style doors; as well as the simple tree limb fences.
We stayed at an amazing (and very photogenic) Airbnb studio right in the Tao Plaza/Historic Downtown Taos Shopping District, which was a historic adobe Hacienda! Here are photos of the outside of the Airbnb:
And finally (to end your visual torture of seeing my B&W photography attempts), when we visited the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge in Taos, it looked ripe for B&W photos so here you go:

























What a visually pleasing place! The church has quite a personality. I love your bridge photos with the contrast of the man made angles of the bridge contrasted with the natural lines of the landscape and I especially like the way the bridge’s straight shadow is converted into squiggles by the terrain.
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I bet you would do quite the sketch of this place! Thanks so much for your detailed comments using your artistic eye 🙂
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Gorgeous photos Tierney!
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Thanks so much Wendy 🙂
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Lovely photos
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Thanks so much!
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Great photos! I especially love the one of the church window.
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Thanks so much, I like that one too 🙂
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I love B&W photos, but don’t know why. They provide a unique contrast to color photos. Love this stuff.
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Thanks so much, they are so visually pleasing to me with the right images (and I learned they do not work for all images sometimes color is much better!) 🙂
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Agreed. But man, those black and whites are so stark and crisp.
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Very interesting structures, I see you had fun photographing. One challenge presented by smartphones is that the lens on the phone has a very wide angle that causes distortions. Distortion is more apparent when we photograph architecture. The walls may loook like they are converging when you come close and point the phone up. Although it can be problematic, sometimes causes an interesting effect like the church right below the photo of San Francisco de Assis. I like the contrast in your photos, good job doing the b&w conversion.
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I appreciate a real photographer weighing in and I’ve always wondered why something seems a little off when I photograph architecture! Thanks so much on your compliments it means a lot to me 🙂
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The influence of these two artists shows. I thoroughly enjoyed looking at your black & white photographs
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Thanks so much and I am going to print out one or two of the images and put them with my Ansel Adams prints on the upstairs guest room wall! 🙂
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Great idea
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STUNNING!! As always your photographs are pure pleasure for the eyes! Not just blowin’ smoke! I’ll keep saying it…you need to compile your photos from different trips and life and make a wonderful coffee table book. It will be amazing!!🥰
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Black & white is always the way to go if you want to explore texture and surface. These are lovely!
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Very cool photos. I’m sure Ansel is giving you a thumbs up.
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Thanks so much! 🙂
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What beautiful pictures Tierney, I love the black and white!
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Thanks so much 🙂
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So are you making a quilt based on this? When we were last in NM, I made some palettes based on what I saw but have yet to translate them into a quilt. And never mind how long ago that was.
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Oh that is a beautiful idea…perhaps…so many ideas and only two hands lol 🙂
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Your photos are beautiful! You are way too modest 🙂 Looks like a beautiful place to visit! How cool that you got to see the church that has been depicted in so much art!
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Thanks so much I really appreciate that! It was very cool to see the church in person 🙂
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