Julia Cumes Photography

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  • People silhouetted on the jetty at Sesuit Harbor in Dennis, MA. I feel this moment really captures the magic of a summer evening on Cape Cod.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle017.JPG
  • A little girl runs across a bridge  to the beach with her red bucket on a Cape Cod summer day.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-017.jpg
  • A little girl runs across a bridge  to the beach with her red bucket on a Cape Cod summer day.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle006.JPG
  • A dog lies between his owner’s feet on a summer’s day.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-058.jpg
  • People silhouetted on the jetty at Sesuit Harbor in Dennis, MA. I feel this moment really captures the magic of a summer evening on Cape Cod.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-040.jpg
  • A dog lies between his owner’s feet on a summer’s day.
    JuliaCumesPortraits-070.jpg
  • Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-037.jpg
  • A woman harvests shellfish at low tide in Wellfleet, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle002.JPG
  • A same-sex couple dances on Macmillan Pier in Provincetown, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-043.jpg
  • Every year since the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Kurt Martin has attached an American flag to one weir pole at each of his five weir traps. Orleans fisherman, Kurt Martin, owns and operates one of the last weirtrap fishing outfits left on Cape Cod. Weirs are an ancient form of trapping fish. They were used by Native Americans hundreds of years ago and have changed little since. They're an environmentally friendly form of fishing as, unlike in other forms of commercial fishing, undersized fish are not caught alongside adult fish.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-018.jpg
  • A father and daughter head out on a jetty to go fishing.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle020.JPG
  • A surfer in wetsuit from behind carrying a surfboard at Whitecrest Beach in Wellfleet, MA
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle015.JPG
  • Every year since the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, Kurt Martin has attached an American flag to one weir pole at each of his five weir traps. Orleans fisherman, Kurt Martin, owns and operates one of the last weirtrap fishing outfits left on Cape Cod. Weirs are an ancient form of trapping fish. They were used by Native Americans hundreds of years ago and have changed little since. They're an environmentally friendly form of fishing as, unlike in other forms of commercial fishing, undersized fish are not caught alongside adult fish.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle007.JPG
  • A woman harvests shellfish at low tide in Wellfleet, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle003.JPG
  • A man hikes at Cold Storage Beach on Cape Cod.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-054.jpg
  • A father and daughter head out on a jetty to go fishing.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-051.jpg
  • Waterfight at the pond.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-041.jpg
  • Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-038.jpg
  • A surfer in wetsuit from behind carrying a surfboard at Whitecrest Beach in Wellfleet, MA
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-036.jpg
  • A boy holds a lobster on a boat in Chatham, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-020.jpg
  • A fisherman’s hands on the boat’s wheel.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-019.jpg
  • A joyful young girl jumps rope at Race Point Lighthouse in Provincetown, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-014.jpg
  • A man harvests shellfish at low tide in Wellfleet, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-002.jpg
  • A same-sex couple dances on Macmillan Pier in Provincetown, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle019.JPG
  • Waterfight at the pond.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle018.JPG
  • Cape_Cod_Lifestyle016.JPG
  • A boy holds a lobster on a boat in Chatham, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle009.JPG
  • A fisherman’s hands on the boat’s wheel.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle008.JPG
  • A young woman stand up paddle boards with her dog.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle005.JPG
  • A joyful young girl jumps rope at Race Point Lighthouse in Provincetown, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle004.JPG
  • Fireworks explode over the ocean on Cape Cod, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-053.jpg
  • Children are silhouetted at sunset on a Cape Cod beach.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-049.jpg
  • A young woman stand up paddle boards with her dog.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-016.jpg
  • A woman harvests shellfish at low tide in Wellfleet, MA.
    Outdoor_Lifestyle_Julia_Cumes-003.jpg
  • Fireworks explode over the ocean on Cape Cod, MA.
    Cape_Cod_Lifestyle021.JPG
  • I was photographing in the other directoin at Cold Storage Beach in Dennis, MA when I turned around and saw eoplesilhouetted on the jetty. I loved how expressive their body positions were and felt that the moment really captured the magic of a summer evening on Cape Cod.
    Summer_Silhouettes.jpg
  • I was photographing in the other directoin at Cold Storage Beach in Dennis, MA when I turned around and saw eoplesilhouetted on the jetty. I loved how expressive their body positions were and felt that the moment really captured the magic of a summer evening on Cape Cod.
    JuliaCumesOutdoorLifestyle-011.jpg
  • Stephanie Whitehead, 40, is photographed on moving day in her and her family's new home in South Yarmouth, MA. Two years ago, Stephanie was experiencing extreme hip pain and sought medical attention. Doctors couldn't find the cause of the pain and so she went to a chiropractor. When, a few weeks later, she found she couldn't get out of bed due to pain, she was transported to the hospital by ambulance and after a catscan, she learned she had stage four metastatic breast cancer.  "Metastatic cancer means the cancer has already moved to other parts of my body," she explains. "I was told I had a 22% chance of making it five years". Stephanie was treated with radiation, chemotherapy and endochrine therapies to try slow further metastasis.  "Dying isn't an option for me. I've always been the one that takes care of my family so I have to keep going, My children lost their father at the age of 5 and 8 so I have to be here for them," she explains. Stephanie and her now husband, DJ, were recently able to purchase the house in Yarmouth through an affordable housing program. "I had two things on my bucket list--owning our own home and going to California and both them are being accomplished this summer. I guess I need to make a new bucket list," she says, laughing. Stephanie has signed releases for her tissue and data to be used by "The Metastatic Breast Cancer Project"--a research project seeking to better understand and find therapies for this virulent form of cancer. "It may not save me but it could save someone else," she says.
    Staphanie_Whitehead.jpg
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