Over the first few months of my project, I interviewed women of all ages. I asked them all questions about their experience as women and collected anecdotes. After each interview, I noted down their initials, their response, and justification. Then, I spent a few days over the weekends to take photos. I picked one word at a time and brainstormed ways I could capture that feeling in a photo. Sometimes, I had a photo already which fit the word, and I could re-edit, crop, or otherwise alter it to better represent the word. I always took the justification for the response into account to make sure I most accurately portrayed the word. One example was from an 11-year-old girl who chose the word "Proud". I had a photo from the Carbondale Rodeo of a cowgirl with the Colorado flag. In the photo, she urges her horse forward and holds the flag high above her head. When I took that photo, the crowd was cheering. There was an overwhelming feeling of pride and joy, and I think the photo captures that aspect of the female experience well. After collecting some photos, I realized that they were all very different. This makes sense since no two people experience life differently, and the photos represent different perspectives. Nevertheless, I planned to display them together and felt that they needed some form of continuity. I chose to make them black and white. I felt that taking the colour away brought a focus to the shapes, movement, and light. Overall, it brought the feeling to the forefront and I liked that. To display my photos, I created a Google site. On this website, I put the age and initials of the interviewee and the one-word response next to each photo. When displaying the photos, I chose to place juxtaposing words next to each other to emphasize the diversity and bifurcation of the female experience.