I started thinking about boats, and other things, and writing about them. But it got long, and Friday night ran out on me, and who wants to read long posts then anyway...
Thanks so much, what a nice response for a Friday overnighter. A boatyard is pretty much as good as an art gallery to me, without the strain of feeling that I need to have a cultured opinion about it.
I'm still uncertain about the large sized dispay. It's great for landscape format, but portrait means you can't see all the picture, and that's unsatisfactory... but now the next size down just looks titchy. Clicking on them will get them to a comfortable screen size, but the object was to avoid having to do that. Ho hum.
Oh, William Morris would have loved these blues!
ReplyDeletethat third picture is divine. I don't know what it is, but I love it! maybe that's partly why I love it.
ReplyDeleteOh, mimosa and now cool blues. Magnificent!
ReplyDeleteLovely rich blues. I like how when you zoom in you get the textures; I don't think I've thought about the texture of boats before.
ReplyDeleteOooh, lovely blues, rather Yves Klein blue! The last one with the rusty red spot is my favourite.
ReplyDeleteSuch pre-raphaelite blues.
ReplyDeleteImpressionist art, every one. But #4 is lookin' at me funny.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, what a nice response for a Friday overnighter. A boatyard is pretty much as good as an art gallery to me, without the strain of feeling that I need to have a cultured opinion about it.
ReplyDeleteI'm still uncertain about the large sized dispay. It's great for landscape format, but portrait means you can't see all the picture, and that's unsatisfactory... but now the next size down just looks titchy. Clicking on them will get them to a comfortable screen size, but the object was to avoid having to do that. Ho hum.
Ahhh what divine blues..
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos. Like paintings.
ReplyDeletei adore the "face" in that 4th one!!
ReplyDeletefab fab fab !!!
ReplyDeleteI wish I had the talent to compose a Delta Blues song here.
ReplyDeleteOne might almost say that the more abstract they are, the more compelling.
ReplyDelete