Monday, March 9, 2026

Meet “Sparky” and the TTC Workers







Some people walk past construction and just see orange barrels.

Bob sees a story.

The other day while wandering through Toronto with a camera — doing what Bob does best — he came across a group of TTC workers repairing the streetcar tracks near the Don River bridge. The road was wet from the rain, orange cones stretched down the street, and sparks were flying off the rails as the crew worked.

And that’s when Bob met Sparky.

One of the workers was grinding down the rail with a machine that threw bright sparks across the wet pavement. The sparks bounced off puddles and rails like tiny fireworks in the middle of a grey Toronto morning. Bob thought the nickname fit perfectly.

So in Bob’s mind, that worker became Sparky.

Street photography isn’t just about people walking past storefronts. Sometimes it’s about the people who keep the city moving while everyone else is rushing somewhere else.


The Workers Behind the Tracks

Standing there watching the crew, Bob realized something.

Thousands of people ride the Toronto Transit Commission streetcars every day, but most riders never think about the people who maintain the tracks under those vehicles.

These workers were doing careful, precise work:

  • Grinding rails smooth

  • Adjusting track alignment

  • Moving heavy equipment

  • Coordinating trucks, machines, and safety barriers

It’s noisy work. Dirty work. And on this damp day, it was also wet work.

But it’s also skilled work.

One worker operated a Caterpillar loader, moving materials into place while others prepared tools from the back of a truck. Another worker stood watch further down the track making sure everything was safe while traffic crept past the construction barrels.

Meanwhile, Sparky kept grinding away at the rail.

Every burst of sparks meant another piece of rail being shaped so the streetcars could roll smoothly through the city again.


The Street Photographer’s Moment

For Bob, moments like this are why he loves street photography.

You don’t need a parade.
You don’t need a festival.
You don’t even need sunshine.

Sometimes all you need is:

  • A wet street

  • A few orange construction barrels

  • A group of workers doing their job

  • And one guy named Sparky making sparks fly.

That’s Toronto.

Not the postcard version of the city.

But the real version — where the people who keep the city running are out there in the rain fixing rails so the next streetcar arrives on time.


Bob’s Thought of the Day

Next time your streetcar glides smoothly down the tracks, remember something.

Somewhere in Toronto there was probably a worker like Sparky standing in the rain with a grinder making those rails just right.

And if Bob happens to be nearby with a camera…

Well, that story might just end up on this blog. 


 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Bob’s Great-Great-Grandfather: One of Toronto’s First Street Photographers








One of the First Street Photographers in Toronto

Every photographer has a story about how they got started.

Some people say they took a class.
Some say they bought a new camera.

But Bob’s story goes back a lot further than that.

Long before digital cameras…
Long before film cameras…
Even before anyone used the words street photography

Bob’s great-great-grandfather was already out on the streets of Toronto with a camera.

And not just any camera.

One of those big wooden box cameras with bellows, mounted on a heavy tripod. The kind that made people stand still for a few seconds while the photo was taken.


A Newspaper Photographer in Early Toronto

Family stories say Bob’s great-great-grandfather worked as a newspaper photographer in Toronto in the 1890s.

At a time when most photographers worked inside studios taking formal portraits, he preferred to go outside and photograph real life on the streets.

He documented everyday scenes for the newspaper:

  • People walking through the city

  • Workers heading to factories

  • Horse-drawn wagons on cobblestone streets

  • Children stopping to stare at the strange man with the large camera

In many ways, he was doing what we now call street photography, long before the term even existed.

He believed the same thing Bob believes today:

The streets tell the story of a city.


Paddling the Don River for Photos

Family stories also say he sometimes traveled through Toronto using the Don River.

He would paddle a small canoe with his camera gear carefully packed inside. When he found an interesting street, bridge, or busy part of town, he would pull over, set up the camera, and wait for the right moment.

Workers walking to factories.
Horse-drawn wagons rolling down the street.
Families out for a Sunday stroll.

Even back then, he understood something that still guides street photographers today.

The best photographs come from watching everyday life unfold.


A Family Tradition of Street Photography

Looking back at those stories, Bob sometimes thinks street photography might run in the family.

His great-great-grandfather walked the same streets of Toronto more than a century ago.

He carried heavy camera equipment.
He watched people going about their lives.
And he documented the city as it changed and grew.

The equipment today is smaller.
The photos are digital.
And instead of paddling a canoe down the Don River, Bob usually rides the TTC to get around the city.

But the idea is still the same.

Walk the streets.
Watch people.
Wait for life to happen.

And take the photograph.

Maybe Bob didn’t invent street photography in Toronto after all.

Maybe he’s just continuing a family tradition that started with a newspaper photographer in the 1890s.

Three types of Photos at One Ice Rink







Toronto is a city where photographers are always looking for something interesting. Sometimes that means going downtown to photograph big events. Sometimes it means waiting for fog to roll through the skyline.

And sometimes it means standing at a quiet outdoor ice rink with a camera and realizing that one place can give you three completely different kinds of photographs.

That is exactly what happened to Bob the Street Photographer.


1. Reflections on the Ice

The first thing Bob noticed was the ice itself.

When the rink is freshly frozen and no one is skating yet, the surface becomes almost like a mirror. The tall condos around the rink appear upside-down in the ice.

Bob crouched low with his camera and suddenly the whole skyline appeared inside the rink.

It almost looked like Toronto had been flipped upside down.

For a street photographer this is a gift. You don’t even need to travel downtown to photograph architecture. The buildings come to you in reflection.

The trick Bob uses is simple:

  • Get low to the ice

  • Use the smooth surface as a mirror

  • Let the buildings or lights create patterns

Sometimes the reflection looks more interesting than the real building.


2. Shadows Across the Rink

Later in the day the sun started moving across the sky.

That is when the second type of photo appeared: shadows.

The trees around the rink cast long shapes across the ice. Instead of photographing the trees themselves, Bob photographed their shadows stretching across the white surface.

It almost looked like abstract art.

Ice rinks are great for this because:

  • The white ice acts like a giant canvas

  • Shadows become very visible

  • Lines and shapes appear that you normally wouldn’t notice

Bob always says shadows are free photography lessons. They teach you to see shapes instead of objects.


3. People on the Ice

Of course, an ice rink eventually fills with people.

Kids learning to skate.
Someone practicing hockey shots.
Someone just walking out onto the ice to see if it’s slippery.

This is where street photography comes alive.

Bob noticed a puck sitting on the ice and someone stepping carefully toward it. That simple moment became a photograph. Nothing dramatic, just a small story happening in everyday Toronto life.

That’s what Bob loves about street photography — the ordinary moments.


One Location, Three Types of Photography

What Bob realized standing there was something many photographers forget.

You don’t always need new locations.

One place can give you:

  • Reflections

  • Shadows

  • People

All within a few minutes.

A simple neighbourhood rink suddenly becomes a photography studio for the whole city.


Bob’s Lesson from the Ice

Bob packed up his camera and looked around one more time at the rink reflecting the condos above it.

Sometimes the best photography locations in Toronto aren’t famous landmarks.

Sometimes it’s just a frozen sheet of ice in a neighbourhood park.

And if you look carefully, you might walk away with three completely different photos from the exact same spot.

That’s the kind of place Bob likes to find.





 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Three Ways Through the Don Valley







The Don Valley has always been one of those places in Toronto where you can actually see the history of transportation all in one place. If you stand on one of the bridges and look around with a camera in your hand, the story unfolds right in front of you.

Today Bob went out for a photo walk and realized something interesting. In just a few minutes, he photographed three different ways people have travelled through the Don Valley over the years.


The River – Toronto’s First Transportation Route

Long before there were highways, trains, or condos, there was just the Don River.

Early settlers and Indigenous peoples used the river valley as a natural corridor through the landscape. Canoes moved along the water and trails followed the riverbanks. The valley itself was the route.

Standing on the bridge today, the river looks calm and quiet, winding its way through the city like it has for centuries. It is easy to forget that this was once the main route through the valley.

The trees are still there, the water is still flowing, but now the city surrounds it.


The Railways – The Industrial Age

Then came the railways.

In the 1800s and early 1900s the Don Valley became a major rail corridor for Toronto. Tracks were laid through the valley because trains prefer flat land, and the river valley provided the perfect path through the city.

Freight trains carried goods, coal, lumber, and people into Toronto. Factories and industrial buildings grew along the tracks.

Even today, when Bob looks down at the railway lines, he is looking at one of the oldest transportation systems still operating in the valley.

The tracks run straight through the landscape like a steel timeline.


The Highway – The Age of the Automobile

Finally came the automobile age.

In the 1960s Toronto built the Don Valley Parkway, carving a highway through the valley to move cars quickly into downtown. What once carried canoes and trains now carries thousands of vehicles every day.

Standing above the highway, Bob watched cars, trucks, and cement mixers moving along the DVP like a river of steel.

It is loud, busy, and fast — very different from the quiet river just a few metres away.


Three Eras in One Photograph

What struck Bob today was that all three transportation systems still exist together.

Within a few metres you can see:

  • The Don River – the original route through the valley

  • The railway tracks – the industrial transportation age

  • The Don Valley Parkway – the modern car era

Three different centuries of movement layered on top of each other.

For a street photographer, it’s like looking at a living timeline of Toronto.


Why Bob Loves Photographing the Don Valley

Most people drive through the valley and never really notice it.

But if you stop for a moment and stand on a bridge with a camera, you realize something:

The Don Valley isn’t just scenery.
It’s Toronto’s transportation history carved into the landscape.

And sometimes the best photographs aren’t just about what you see —

they’re about the story hidden in the scene.

Bob just happened to be standing in the right place to see it. 





 

Friday, March 6, 2026

Bob’s Four Seasons of Toronto





Bob always tells people that if you want to understand Toronto, you have to see it in all four seasons. The city is never the same twice. The light changes, the water changes, the skyline changes, and even the way people move through the streets changes.

For a street photographer like Bob, that means four completely different cities in the same place.

Spring – The Harbour Wakes Up

In the spring, the harbour starts to come back to life. The ferries start moving again, the wind is still cold, but the sun begins to sparkle on the water.

Bob likes to stand along the waterfront and watch the ferry head toward the islands. The light dances across Lake Ontario like thousands of tiny reflections. After a long winter, it feels like the city is stretching and waking up.

Spring photos are about fresh light and movement.

Summer – Toronto Shines

Summer is when Toronto becomes a postcard.

The skyline rises above the lake, boats move in and out of the harbour, and the islands are full of people escaping the heat of the city. Bob often takes the ferry just to photograph the skyline from the water.

From the lake you can see everything — the towers, the construction cranes, the old buildings and the new ones all standing together.

For Bob, summer photography is about colour, energy, and the full life of the city.

Fall – The Dramatic Skyline

Fall brings dramatic skies and softer light. The air gets cooler, the crowds thin out, and the skyline starts to look more serious.

Bob likes black-and-white photography in the fall. The clouds rolling over the towers make Toronto look almost like an old film photograph. The CN Tower standing tall over the city becomes the anchor of the skyline.

Fall photos are about contrast, mood, and texture.

Winter – Another World

Then winter arrives and Toronto transforms completely.

The harbour can freeze over in places. Sheets of ice float slowly on the water and the horizon fades into the grey sky. Sometimes it feels like the city is sitting on the edge of the Arctic.

Bob loves photographing the ice because every day it changes. One day the lake is open, the next day it looks like a frozen puzzle of drifting plates.

Winter photography is about silence, atmosphere, and patience.

One City, Four Different Stories

Bob says a lot of photographers visit Toronto once and think they have seen it.

But if you really want to photograph Toronto, you need to come back again and again.

Spring light on the harbour.
Summer skyline from the ferry.
Fall clouds over the CN Tower.
Winter ice drifting on Lake Ontario.

Four seasons.

Four different cities.

And for Bob the street photographer, it means four times as many stories to photograph. 📷


 

Friday, February 27, 2026

3.4 Million Views and Counting – Bob’s Most Viewed Photos Since 2009







Bob does not normally brag.

But today… Bob is looking at a number.

3,400,000+ views.

Since 2009.

And these?
These are the photos with the most views on his Flickr account.

Out of thousands and thousands of images — 3,000+ uploaded just in 2024 alone — these are the ones the world keeps clicking on.


The Little Log Cabin (One of His Most Viewed)

The black and white photo of the small wooden cabin is one of Bob’s quiet giants — and one of his most viewed images.

No skyline.
No crowd.
No dramatic event.

Just wood, texture, history, and light.

It proves something important: sometimes the simplest frame travels the furthest.

Out of everything Bob has photographed — protests, Crosstown trains, harbour ice — this small structure keeps drawing viewers in.


Two Walkers, Brick Wall (High View Count Classic)

Two people walking with poles against that brick wall — “Authorized Parking Only” behind them.

This is pure Bob street photography.

Movement.
Urban geometry.
Everyday life.

And it turns out… everyday life is what people connect with most. This image climbed high in views because it feels real.


Sunglasses Portrait (One of the Top Portraits)

The black and white portrait with oversized sunglasses.

Strong light. Strong face. Strong presence.

This is one of Bob’s most viewed portraits — proving that when street portraiture works, it travels far.

No fancy lighting. No studio. Just Toronto sunlight and trust.


Polar Bear Plunge (Massive Views)

The crowd charging into Lake Ontario with the skyline behind them — this one exploded in views.

Energy. Movement. Colour. Toronto madness in winter.

This became one of Bob’s most viewed photos because it captures that exact second where people go from warm sand to freezing water — with the city standing tall behind them.

Sometimes chaos wins the internet.


Rainy Street Scene (Atmosphere Gets Clicks)

Umbrella down. Wet pavement. Moody downtown corner.

Rain photographs always hit differently.

This image climbed in views because people feel it. You can almost hear the water and smell the pavement.

Bob stayed out in the rain — and the views followed.


What It Means

These are not random photos.

These are the ones that rose above thousands of others.

From 2009 until now, Bob has documented:

  • Harbour ice

  • Crosstown construction

  • Line 5 finally opening

  • Empty PATH food courts

  • Festivals

  • Portraits

  • History

  • Quiet moments

Out of all of that — these are the ones people returned to the most.

3.4 million total views isn’t one viral hit.

It’s 15+ years of showing up.

And these top-viewed photos prove something Bob has always believed:

You don’t need the newest camera.
You don’t need permission.
You don’t need a studio.

You need to walk.
You need to look.
You need to press the shutter.

And apparently…

3.4 million times, someone looked back.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Bob and the Honourable Mention in Brutal Toronto






Bob did not win.

He did not take first place.
He did not take second.
He did not even take third.

Bob received… an Honourable Mention.

And for his series on Brutalized Toronto.


This year Bob entered the camera club competition with something different. No sunsets. No ducks. No soft-focus flowers. No cozy St. Lawrence Market Christmas lights.

Instead, he brought concrete.

He brought steel.

He brought torn-down brick and exposed beams.

He brought the underbelly of Toronto.


The judges stared at the photos.

One image showed a brick building ripped open, its skeleton exposed — steel beams holding up what used to be offices, maybe apartments, maybe someone’s life. Windows gone. Walls peeled back. Modern glass condos rising smugly behind it.

Another showed the old LCBO storefront boarded and fenced, snow piled dirty in front like a forgotten memory.

Another was the underpass — raw concrete ribs arching overhead, scarred, patched, water-stained. The road wet. No pedestrians. Just silence and structural fatigue.

Bob titled the series:

“Brutalise: Toronto in Transition.”


Some members of the Bob Camera Club whispered.

“Is that even photography?”
“It looks unfinished.”
“It’s depressing.”

Bob smiled.

Because that was the point.

Toronto isn’t just cranes and ribbon cuttings. It’s demolition dust. It’s temporary fencing. It’s structural braces holding history upright for just a little longer. It’s the moment before the glass goes up.

Bob sees beauty in what others call ugly.


When the awards were announced, the winning images were safe:
• A swan at sunrise.
• A lighthouse at golden hour.
• A macro of frost on a leaf.

Then came the Honourable Mentions.

“And for capturing the raw urban transformation of Toronto with strong lines and compelling geometry…”

Bob’s name.

Polite applause.

Bob walked up, accepted the certificate, and thought:

Honourable Mention?

Good.

Because brutalism isn’t supposed to win popularity contests.


Bob doesn’t photograph pretty Toronto.

He photographs honest Toronto.

He photographs:
• Buildings mid-surgery.
• Concrete with scars.
• Steel holding memories together.
• Roads under bridges that feel like cathedrals of infrastructure.

He photographs the city as it is — not as it markets itself.


Later that night, Bob looked at his Flickr feed — thousands of images documenting Toronto changing brick by brick.

He realized something.

Awards are nice.

But history is better.

In ten years, when those condos are finished and the fences are gone, Bob’s Honourable Mention photos will show what stood there before.

That’s not second place.

That’s documentation.

And Bob, the so-called street photographer extraordinaire of Toronto, is just fine with that.

Bob in Another World – The Ice Fields of Toronto Harbour








This morning, Bob did not travel to the Arctic.

He did not book a flight to Iceland.
He did not rent snowshoes.
He did not pack survival gear.

He simply went down to Toronto Harbour.

And suddenly… he was standing on another planet.

The harbour ice right now doesn’t look like water. It doesn’t even look like winter. It looks like a frozen ocean that broke apart mid-sentence. Giant plates of ice float like shattered glass. Dark water snakes between them like cracks in the earth. Everything is quiet. Grey sky. Grey water. Grey horizon. No colour. No noise.

Just space.

Bob stood there with his camera thinking, Is this still Toronto?

In the summer, this is paddle boards, kayaks, Harbourfront concerts, ferries to the islands. Today? It looks like the edge of the world. The ice slabs are layered and textured — some smooth like frosted cake, others jagged and thick like broken stone. The water between them moves slowly, pushing and pulling the pieces as if rearranging a puzzle that will never quite fit.

And that horizon…

The skyline disappears into haze. The far shoreline fades into a thin charcoal line. It feels endless. It feels northern. It feels wild.

Bob loves moments like this because they remind him that Toronto is not just glass towers and streetcars. It is also wind. Water. Ice. Movement. Change.

You don’t have to travel far to photograph something that feels otherworldly. Sometimes you just need to show up when the conditions are right.

The harbour ice creates natural abstract compositions:

  • Leading lines formed by dark channels between ice sheets

  • Layers of texture from slushy buildup and smooth frozen plates

  • Minimalist winter tones — blues, greys, silvers

  • A horizon that almost disappears

It’s not dramatic like a snowstorm. It’s not colourful like autumn. It’s quiet drama. Subtle power.

Bob noticed something else too.

There were birds sitting calmly on the ice as if this was completely normal. For them, it is. For us, it feels like standing at the edge of a frozen sea.

And of course, Bob kept a safe distance. Harbour ice is not a place to test your luck. It’s a place to observe. To photograph. To respect.

What fascinates Bob most is how the harbour constantly reinvents itself. In summer, it reflects sunlight and sailboats. In fall, it mirrors gold trees. In winter, it fractures into something alien and beautiful.

Toronto Harbour — another world hiding in plain sight.

You just have to look.

change Toronto island disappears in a haze

Bob in Another World – The Ice Fields of Toronto Harbour

This morning, Bob did not travel to the Arctic.

He did not book a flight to Iceland.
He did not rent snowshoes.
He did not pack survival gear.

He simply went down to Toronto Harbour.

And suddenly… he was standing on another planet.

The harbour ice right now doesn’t look like water. It doesn’t even look like winter. It looks like a frozen ocean that broke apart mid-sentence. Giant plates of ice float like shattered glass. Dark water snakes between them like cracks in the earth. Everything is quiet. Grey sky. Grey water. Grey horizon. No colour. No noise.

Just space.

Bob stood there with his camera thinking, Is this still Toronto?

In the summer, this is paddleboards, kayaks, Harbourfront concerts, ferries to the islands. Today? It looks like the edge of the world. The ice slabs are layered and textured — some smooth like frosted cake, others jagged and thick like broken stone. The water between them moves slowly, pushing and pulling the pieces as if rearranging a puzzle that will never quite fit.

And that horizon…

Toronto Island disappears in a haze. The far shoreline fades into a thin charcoal line. It feels endless. It feels northern. It feels wild.

Bob loves moments like this because they remind him that Toronto is not just glass towers and streetcars. It is also wind. Water. Ice. Movement. Change.

You don’t have to travel far to photograph something that feels otherworldly. Sometimes you just need to show up when the conditions are right.

The harbour ice creates natural abstract compositions:

  • Leading lines formed by dark channels between ice sheets

  • Layers of texture from slushy buildup and smooth frozen plates

  • Minimalist winter tones — blues, greys, silvers

  • A horizon that almost disappears

It’s not dramatic like a snowstorm. It’s not colourful like autumn. It’s quiet drama. Subtle power.

Bob noticed something else too.

There were birds sitting calmly on the ice as if this was completely normal. For them, it is. For us, it feels like standing at the edge of a frozen sea.

And of course, Bob kept a safe distance. Harbour ice is not a place to test your luck. It’s a place to observe. To photograph. To respect.

What fascinates Bob most is how the harbour constantly reinvents itself. In summer, it reflects sunlight and sailboats. In fall, it mirrors gold trees. In winter, it fractures into something alien and beautiful.

Toronto Harbour — another world hiding in plain sight.

You just have to look.

 

Squinting a little through his cataracts… thinking does Bob need to buy this lens?


Meet “Sparky” and the TTC Workers

Some people walk past construction and just see orange barrels. Bob sees a story. The other day while wandering through Toronto with a camer...