GIFT OF SIGHT

Forever Young Images (Photography by Ashley Sutera)

My name is Ashley.
freelance photographer
I guess you could say I'm "developing" my craft
Based in Boston
I know who I am and I've come to love who that is.

Loves:photography, music, writing, dance, drawing, reading, painting, nature, interesting people, interesting places.
I'm addicted to my Nikon and art in its various forms.

Hates:Growing up. It hurts.


Everything on my Tumblr is the scattered fragments of my brain (which is a scary and delightful place) Or just some of the beautiful people places and things I come across that have inspired me and have touched my life.
Get to know me :]

ASK ME A QUESTION
ashley.sutera@yahoo.com
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Here is to new beginnings

Here is to new beginnings

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Add me as a contact

Add me as a contact

Wish you were here

Wish you were here

life:

Here, on the 70th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, LIFE.com presents rare and unpublished photos from Hawaii and the mainland, chronicling a nation’s answer to an unprecedented act of war.
Unpublished, training with gas masks in Hawaii, early 1942.

“Ambassador Nomura and Envoy Kurusu,” LIFE reported in mid-December 1941, “had come with the answer to Hull’s note [of protest to the Japanese delegation in D.C.]. Hull read it through and then, for the first time in many long, patient years, the soft-spoken Secretary lost his temper. Into the teeth of the two Japanese, who for once did not grin, he flung these words: ‘In all my 50 years of public service I have never seen a document that was more crowded with infamous falsehoods and distortions — on a scale so huge that I never imagined until today that any government on this planet was capable of uttering them.’”

life:

Here, on the 70th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, LIFE.com presents rare and unpublished photos from Hawaii and the mainland, chronicling a nation’s answer to an unprecedented act of war.

Unpublished, training with gas masks in Hawaii, early 1942.

“Ambassador Nomura and Envoy Kurusu,” LIFE reported in mid-December 1941, “had come with the answer to Hull’s note [of protest to the Japanese delegation in D.C.]. Hull read it through and then, for the first time in many long, patient years, the soft-spoken Secretary lost his temper. Into the teeth of the two Japanese, who for once did not grin, he flung these words: ‘In all my 50 years of public service I have never seen a document that was more crowded with infamous falsehoods and distortions — on a scale so huge that I never imagined until today that any government on this planet was capable of uttering them.’”