About

Roger Good Photography is a quiet tribute to the forgotten—an exploration of the overlooked corners of our world, captured in black and white.

Roger Good is a Colorado-based photographer with a deep fascination for abandoned places, weathered structures, and traces of time. His lens is drawn to the remnants of rural industry, crumbling homesteads, and the quiet decay that tells a story long after people have gone. Through stark monochrome imagery, Roger brings out the raw textures, contrasts, and emotional weight of these subjects—preserving their dignity and mystery.

What You'll See This body of work is not about nostalgia. It's about witnessing what remains:

Forgotten barns, shuttered gas stations, rusting machinery, and ghost town relics.

Images stripped of color, emphasizing form, shadow, and structure over sentiment.

Photographs that ask the viewer to stop—and truly see—what history leaves behind.

Why Black & White For Roger, black and white photography strips away distractions. It elevates decay into design, texture into testimony. In the absence of color, every broken board and fractured window becomes more haunting, more honest.

A Quiet Philosophy This work is about presence—not performance. Roger doesn’t stage or dramatize. Instead, he documents things as they are, giving space to places that most people pass by. Each photograph is an act of attention and preservation—visual archaeology in an age of distraction.

Whether you're drawn to the beauty of abandonment or the depth of black and white, Roger’s work offers a still, thoughtful counterpoint to a world that moves too fast.