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Our Q&A Interview wasn’t enough for us when it came to writer/photographer Stephanie Cornell (Elizabeth Taylor on Flickr). If you read her blog you’ll see she uses her writing and photography to describe experiences and places in such a way that you feel like you’ve been transported there.

 

We asked her to tell us about a few of her favorite places to travel (below), and what she wrote is a treat. We hope you enjoy!

 

New Orleans/USA

 

I’ve driven cross-country in the United States so many times I have lost track. But the first time was completely alone in 1997, from Boston to California. I connected the dots between friends’ addresses over the course of months and crossed the Mississippi River for the very first time. I saw wild ponies in Virginia, lived in an RV park in New Orleans for a month, camped on the beach in Texas, soaked in snowy hot springs in Colorado, hiked canyons in Arizona and explored the coast of California. I was offered so many couches and guest rooms and local brews and favorite taco stands and homemade pie that year, and that really is how you get to know a place, isn’t it?

 

French Quarter

 

Honduras/Central America

 

I celebrated my 30th birthday in Central America, where two of my best friends were living. We traveled overland by bus from Honduras to Nicaragua and finally to Costa Rica. But first I spent a month in the countryside of Honduras, where my friend Heidi was in the Peace Corps in a small town called Jesus de Otoro. Days in Otoro were languid and simple. We cooked, we played with the kittens, visited the neighbors, shopped at the market, drew pictures with the kids next door—a whole day could be spent preparing a soup for dinner or washing the laundry by hand. But it’s the kind of place that marks itself deeply in your memory with its midnight roosters cock-a-doodle-doing and coffee beans roasting over open fires.

 

Beans at farmer’s market in La Esperanza, Honduras

 

Seoul, South Korea

 

I have been living in Seoul for two years now. It is one of the most vibrant, complicated, amazing and soulful places I’ve ever been. I am often struck by just how much my perspective has shifted in those two years. Everything that was so strange and new when I arrived, and how very ordinary it is to me now. But still, I am constantly astounded at the enormity of this city. Just this past weekend I went to a part of Seoul I’d never been to, and it was as if I’d stumbled into some foreign alter ego. I think that is what is most interesting to me about living in a complex country like this. Just when you think you have it all figured out, it is always right there to surprise you and show you something delightfully new.

 

Buddhist Temple on Namhansanseong Mountain, just south of Seoul

 

Fukuoka, Japan

 

I am not really a fan of short trips. I like trips that are like long dinners, prepared carefully all day and served in several courses over the span of a whole night. So far, my time in Japan has been like an appetizer. My opinion is, therefore, underdeveloped. For instance, I believe that Japan is quite possibly perfect. It is a place that is completely its own, unique and captivating. It is very tidy, orderly and well-groomed. It makes amazing food and is extremely friendly. It has the most beautiful packaging and retail displays I have ever seen. I have a big, giant crush on Japan.

 

Hakata Station at Lunchtime

 

Hong Kong

 

When I went to Hong Kong in February, I realized something very important about the way I travel. I need a decompression chamber, of sorts. I can’t just jump right in. I need a day or two to breathe and get my bearings. I need some time to cling to the familiarity of my hotel, to dine within spitting distance and observe life quietly, at arm’s length. I do this everywhere I go, and it’s an unfortunate affliction for weekend trips. But just like people, it takes awhile to get to know a place, to memorize the way it smells and laughs and feels to the touch. I want to get to know places the way I know my dearest friends.

 

Chinese Medicine Shop in Causeway Bay

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I first stumbled upon ‘Elizabeth Taylor’s’ Flickr page when I was looking for images of Austin, Texas. She had a beautiful image of a huge cupcake (on top of an airstream trailer turned restaurant) against a beautiful clouded sky. The image was simple, but really caught my attention. After browsing a few pages of her other work and finding her blog I was hooked.

 

Elizabeth Taylor, also known as Stephanie Cornell, has a rare talent for capturing moving images of ordinary things. Coupled with her funny and insightful ponderings on every subject from international relations to shoe purchases, her work gives you a peek into the life of a traveler soaking up all she can. I think this testimonial on her profile page says it best.

 

“Steph’s a poet. What, she didn‘t tell you? Well, that‘s because she‘s under the mistaken impression that she‘s a designer. Or a musician. Or a filmmaker. Or all of the above. But really she‘s a poet, in the sense that she distills her life into fragments of concentrated impression and emotion, and when you look at the words and images she shares you are reminded of your own experiences in ways that startle and amaze. Steph can‘t help it; it‘s just the way she works.”

 

Check out Stephanie's Flickr page and her newly revamped and relaunched blog.

 

Apartment, Seoul

 

TravelMuse: Tell us a little bit about yourself and your background.

 

Stephanie Cornell: I grew up on the coast, north of Boston. It’s a bit of a ridiculously idyllic New England town. The kind you think is so painfully, excruciatingly boring as kid and later can’t believe you were so lucky to grow up in. It’s also an artist’s community, so I was surrounded by painters, writers, musicians. My mom was a schoolteacher and my dad builds pipe organs, which just made it worse. I really had no chance at a normal, non-creative life. I studied filmmaking at Emerson College in Boston, and then worked in that industry for about 10 years before coming to my senses. Now I am a full-time writer in Seoul, South Korea.

 

TM: What got you interested in photography, and why do you continue to enjoy it?

 

SC: My dad was an amateur photographer when I was young, so I spent a lot of time in front of his camera, messing with cameras and hanging out with him in the darkroom on weekends. So I’ve always been shooting, but it never really grabbed much of my attention until I joined Flickr and started having a reason to shoot.

 

Golden Raspberries, Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, BC

 

TM: How long have you been sharing your photos online, and what do you like/dislike about it?

 

SC: I joined Flickr at the end of 2004 at the request of my friend Marshall. I prefer to call it harassment. At first, it was just a way that I could stay in touch with my friends, because we were spread all over the globe. Photos were a much easier way to stay in touch and much more immediate, too. When I moved to Korea, that all changed. I found a voice, I found a community and I found a direction.

 

Haebangchon, Seoul

 

TM: How does photography tie into and influence other parts of your life (for example, your writing on your blog)?

 

SC: Photography helps tell the story. I studied filmmaking, so telling stories has always been about a combination of words and image for me. The two are so entwined, I would have a hard time doing one without the other. Some people—and some photos—are so good at telling the whole story with the image alone. I am not that kind of photographer, I am not that kind of writer, and I don‘t think I‘m that kind of audience either.

 

Hey Cupcake! South Congress Avenus, Austin, Texas

 

TM: How does being a photographer change how you see the world? Do you look at things differently when you have your camera with you?

 

SC: I look at things differently when I don‘t have my camera with me. I think being a photographer makes me a very annoying dinner guest, a slow travel companion and a distracted conversationalist. It makes me miss my bus stop because I am too involved with how the light is glittering on the buildings. It makes me late a lot. It gets me in trouble sometimes and yelled at other times. But it also can start a conversation or open a door.

 

TM: What advice do you have for aspiring photographers?

 

SC: I‘m extremely lazy when it comes to all things technical. Everything is on a need-to-know basis. Don’t be lazy like me. Learn your gear and learn it well. Then just shoot.

 

Vancouver-Nanaimo Ferry, British Columbia

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