Jack,
I am back. I just wrote about the book William Eggleston's Guide by MOMA 1976 which I purchased sometimes early 80s. This book with tricycle on it's cover came to my mind as sorta hidden link as your photos tend to have several layers to be discovered by viewer and this colorful cutie and it's rock solid composition made me wonder... Nice to hear you too had experienced similar posting problems.
Jack,
Your comments are surely nourishing reading, worth the struggles. I'm glad but want to uncover that I thought these boxes kinda artificial trees, but anyway a feel of gathering with communication is present.
Jack,
These culture spruces appear on several photos in my 2018 and thus no wonder I found them ideal for further shooting, now around sunset. First return to this spot was too early, the light tracks dis disappear , so later timing. Everything was ready when the street light was turned on adding a bonus which I hadn't thought initially. Only a passing buss created ideal multiple light strokes.
Jack,
Here I was approaching a geocache located on the base of this pylon and instantly spotted this lone curiosity so perfectly filling the gap between the trees. While shooting a older couple stopped and asked if I were photographing that bird which I hadn't noticed at all. They were locals but didn't have any explanation why this was left there standing alone.
Jack and Wolfgang,
You can only imagine vaguely how thrilled I was when I spotted this little scene inside children's playground. Luckily it was all quiet around when this perfect moment with shadows casting in ideal angle. I have admit I have soft spot for this kind scenes, soft and hard items.
Jack, I'm very glad that you appreciate this photo as much as myself. This one is another example of something I notice commuting in a bus thus seeing surroundings from a different angle. So I had to visit this spot during weekend with little traffic. Thanks to traffic lights it was possible for me to position myself on the middle of the lane and down on my knees to get this POV. Not mentioning this how brave I was rather how precision counted to catch my inner vision of the scene, how it should look like. But after all this was nothing compared to those landscape photographers who struggle out there in tough environment no matter what the weather is...
I wrote a long comment which was not published. It took a while to remember that similar happened years ago. I had written double quotes in my text and all sudden got prompt that I used illegal code...