We were able to spend last Sunday in San Francisco, going first to see the Luminous Worlds: British Works on Paper 1760–1900 exhibition at the Legion of Honor, and then the J. M. W. Turner: Painting Set Free exhibition at the de Young.
I’m »
We were able to spend last Sunday in San Francisco, going first to see the Luminous Worlds: British Works on Paper 1760–1900 exhibition at the Legion of Honor, and then the J. M. W. Turner: Painting Set Free exhibition at the de Young.
I’m »
More accurately, my saviors are in Threshfield. Alan had to go to work, and I wanted to keep photographing in Yorkshire, so I looked for somewhere not too far beyond Skipton, in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, stuck a pin in the (Google) map and decided on Grassington.
So good, we went there twice!
Saltaire is a model village (and now a UNESCO World Heritage Site) built by Sir Titus Salt on the River Aire to house his workers at his woolen textile mill, Salts Mill. When it was built in 1853 the mill »
Friends told us about a textile exhibition at the Ohio State University art museum in Columbus, OH and one of them was going to be back there last week, so we went down to take a look and hang out for a night; staying in a fabulous »
This may just be the result of another long, cold winter, but I can see that I have not been out with my camera very much, and I have the sense that I am not because nothing is calling to me to be photographed. Something I read about regularly »
It’s now 11 days since 14.1 inches of snow fell on Ann Arbor in less than 30 hours. Obviously not as drastic as Boston, MA, where the season total has now passed 100 inches (despite this one big snow fall, Ann Arbor barely got past half its average February »
17 days after it fell, the snow is still on the ground. The Sedum is still there, though the old flowers have lost their white hats. The paths that the cats and other critters follow, and us on the way to the compost pile, are pretty ingrained.