Play Ball!

Play ball was a familiar cry from my summers as a young baseball player.  Now I sit in the bleachers with a cold coke in hand and watch the boys of summer play the game that I still love.  I'm encouraged when I see the little leaguer step into the batter's box and stare down the pitcher.  I cracked a small smile, wondering how did he earn that shiner.  He tilts his head down as he goes through his ritual.  Nothing he does seems random.  I placed the coke down, picked up my camera and zoomed in.  Grit, determination, calm, focus...the story always happen in front of the lens.  

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Families, Playdates, and Man's best friend....time together.

 
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On a pleasantly cool spring Friday, about mid-morning, I sat in the rectangular shaped plaza in front of the Frisco library and enjoyed a cup of coffee.  From my vantage point, it’s easy to appreciate the deliberate well thought out and simple design of Simpson Plaza.  This space, like many in Frisco, offers an opportunity for families and friends to share some quality time together.  The children, as usual, are the first to realize the freedom to run and play and they take full advantage of the space. Photos were taken by Perry Green.

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The Old Water Tower

 
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If you were to ask me to name the one photograph that I would snap to best describe the city of Frisco, I would smile and say the Old Water Tower. The Old Water Tower can be found at 7th and Elm Street in Frisco.  However, on a sunny day, the white-clad water tower donned with a brightly painted red roof and stamped with the very same raccoon skin emblem of the St. Louis-San Francisco railroad line, from which the city derived its name, can be seen seemingly glowing from many vantage points throughout Frisco.  In 1924, the 50,000-gallon water tower was completed and placed in service.  It would be the lone water tower for the city of Frisco over the next 61 years.  The tower was decommissioned in the 1990's. The City of Frisco has grown vastly around the Old Water Tower since then, with noted growth in the diversity of types of businesses, cultures, sports, and the arts. #friscocaptured. photography by Perry L. Green