It's all in the light.
It's a palpable shift -- as Huxley notes in BRAVE NEW WORLD, unavailable in urbanity -- the bright holes in the inky blackness dim; color appears; smaller forms become distinct. Shadows deepen.
The haziness of the stills taken with this camera evoke nostalgia. Their "instamatic" quality is reminiscent of images from my youth when I wore a 60-pd backback and traveled by foot and thumb.
Morning Shadow
A Little Later
Location Shot
A Bit Later
to me it looks homey, like if it is the lit up hole is the entrance of a home.
ReplyDeleteHmmm, that's very interesting. But actually, the hole is there in order to fit THIS
Deletehttps://www.flickr.com/photos/mfhalb/50575839433/in/photolist-2k4dp2B
rock. Kristen said the campground was built around it and it had a cleft in the top that made it all the more realistic.
You can't tell ME Nature doesn't doesn't have a sense of humor!!
lol, it took me a while but i got it, still a feeling of...being right at home
DeleteCute pics!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Thank you! I'm sorry!
DeleteThe story is told of a Russian emigre who made deliveries at the ceramics studio were Double El worked. He would sometimes stop to talk and one day disclosed that -- in America -- one really only needs two sentences. Michelle, always appreciative of accents and the wisdom of others, began repeating the first sentence to emphasize the wonderful expression of gratitude that precedes the apology -- thereby turning the sentences into a pithy rejoinder appropriate for occasions just such as this!
Und Gesundheit!