23
Jun 11

The Hood, The Sad and The Gritty

Category: Photography |

Photo By Natalie Relf

There are few cities in the world that share the kind of diversity Las Vegas enjoys,  not just the bodies that people the city, but the sites, the activities, and the experiences. You can jump off the side of an 1149-foot-tall building, eat a three Michelin Star meal, be accosted by hundreds of flyer distribution people, pawn your goods on a cable TV show, see scantily clad girls give it all they’ve got (in a show or on the street), and get married all in one night on the same strip of road. Next to the miniature Elvis that hangs out in front of the Bellagio, the tall ones in the wedding chapels seem a tad lackluster. Unless,you’re looking for the ultimate in Las Vegas kitsch at your wedding.

There is an entire section of Las Vegas Boulevard (LVB) that is nearly as invisible as the

Photo by Natalie Relf

people on it. From St. Louis  Ave. all the way to Bonneville on LVB the street sides are dotted with old, and some shoddy, businesses. Peppered in, ONLY on the right side of the road if you are traveling north, is the occasional portal of love, or as some call it, wedding chapel. This particular vicinity owns a saddened, scarred character that is unique to Vegas, and which goes largely unnoticed unless one is in need of a tattoo, a jaunt through the unseemly side of life or a quicky wedding. If you can stomach the overdone, tawdry, undiscriminating sense of decorum that dominates in this dying jungle of the hood, the sad, and the gritty, then you too can create memories to last a lifetime.

Photo by EYEaMUSE

Armed with a digital camera and the exquisitely sharp eye of  my best half, we ventured into the land of Vegas-lost yesterday (During the day of course!) to procure these images, which tell the story of a Las Vegas tradition, and the surrounding sadness felt in the living vibrations of the area. Although, it started out as a quirky, fun kind of story after looking deeper we saw the desperation in the eyes of the boulevard inhabitants. The absurdity and jocularity of the dancing Elvis sign was consumed by the heaviness of seeing a young girl in hot pants trying to make a buck in the hot summer sun in front of an adult bookstore. It’s just not your typical wedding scenery. Chapels are haphazardly nestled between peep shows and lawyers. In fact, maybe it’s not so haphazard at all. If you think about it, Vegas isn’t exactly rooted in a history of family values.

Photo by Natalie Relf

Anyway, what IS a cottage industry in Vegas is the idea of having fun till you pay for it! Or pay for having fun, or is it that having fun costs. Pay to play? You play, you pay? I don’t know, but that is exactly what some of these couples are doing. For some people these types of weddings are a necessity, for others it is a choice. Either way, it’s an experience NEVER to be forgotten.

 

See Flicker photos for the whole story!


by natalier | About the author:

Related Posts

  • No related posts found.

Comments


Posted on Thursday, June 23rd, 2011 at 12:57 am and is filed under Photography. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
6 Comments so far

  1. 1 daniellec on June 23, 2011

    All the cheesy signs this town has kills me!!! Great pictures though! Vegas is never dull!! Always something going on!

  2. 2 dalynb on June 23, 2011

    First and foremost…as someone that has always thought I was a good writer, I am having second thoughts after reading a couple of your blog posts. You are very talented. I hope that you hone your craft.

    I don’t think that anyone else will document the wedding chapels…very good choice. I was clicking through your pics thinking, “Ive been there,” “my friend got married there,” “my other friend got married there, but she’s divorced so it doesnt really count!” haha.

    I’ve never really stopped to think about all the diversity that this city offers until I read your blog…there really is something for everyone. Whether you’re idea of fun is a helicopter ride, a cheap thrill on D street, or fine dining. We’ve got ya covered! :) Good work.

  3. 3 natalier on June 23, 2011

    Hi Dalyn!
    Thank you for the beautiful compliment! I am working on it actively and hope to increase my skill exponentially because there is always room for improvement! The wedding chapel idea just kind of blossomed as my gf and I continued to take pics. It was a lot of fun! And you’re right! Vegas has something for every walk of life!

  4. 4 natalier on June 23, 2011

    For sure! Everywhere you look, and especially where you’re not looking!

  5. 5 jacquelinem on June 26, 2011

    I love your post and your page! I am so new to this, but hopefully I find the patience to understand it all. I also really enjoyed looking at your pictures. Vegas is so much more than the strip and you definitely brought light to that.

  6. 6 natalier on June 26, 2011

    Hi Jacqueline,
    I am truly glad you like the page :D I too am new to all of this, but it has been a great learning experience! I have been in Vegas all my life and I have seen some crazy things, but the diversity is there for anyone who looks for it. BTW, you will find the patience … your grade depends on it!! LOL

Name (required)

Email (required)

Website

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Share your wisdom

*

Podcast Feeds

    • Podcast Feed

Mmmmm Bookmarks

Random Thoughts/Quotes

    "I was reading the dictionary. I thought it was a poem about everything."
    -Steven Wright

    "No community can exist without a community story."
    -Thomas Berry

    "Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has the grander view?"
    -Victor Hugo

    There are no users currently online