I took the following photo the other day while wandering around Tübingen after one of our periodic rain “stormlets”:
“Stormlet” is my new term for those tiny rainstorms that I blogged about last month. You know, the ones where the rain comes along quite suddenly, and then there’s a downpour that lasts for only a few minutes, and then the sun comes, peering through scattered white clouds to reveal a hint of a blue sky.
I explain this only to explain why there’s a puddle in the middle of a street that otherwise looks dry — it hadn’t rained for that long that day, so the main part of the street was able to dry off rather quickly. But, this nice puddle that stuck around for a while had an interesting reflection of one of the many half-timbered buildings in the Altstadt (“old city”) part of Tübingen.
Of course, my description does reveal that it’s a street, not a wall — did you think it was a wall with a window when you first glanced at that photo? I like the illusion that turning this photo on its side creates, both with the street, and the perspective on that house in the reflection. Fun.
BTW, that orange peel is an anomaly here on the streets of Tübingen. In general, the streets here are kept quite clean, so there’s rarely trash like that in the middle of the street. But when I took the picture, I deliberately left the peel in the framing with the reflection. I actually had the thought at the time that it might be interesting to see what happened if I turned the whole scene — street, puddle, orange and all — on its side. So I did. 😉
Like it very much. I was right on top of things, or on the side of things. Aware, when i see something you captured that it may not be what it appears. this is brilliant.
Love this and I thought it was a hole in a wall capturing the buildings on the other side with a reflection of the sun or an orange globe.
Yes, you fooled me. Great photo and a piece of orange peel, who would have thought that.
Gone are the serene photos of yesteryear. Now it’s shock and orange peel. How very punk–I love it!
Your mud-puddle pictures get better and better.
Thanks for all the comments, everybody – thanks for all the positive feedback on the photo! Glad everybody liked my “shock and orange peel” – Will, I love that description. 🙂
Keep it up, Linda. Your photos are amazing, and your words are worth a thousand pictures.
Thanks very much, Will!
WARNING: LIBERAL POLITICAL SATIRE. Shouldn’t you say, “Shock and awerange peel?” to bring a levity into a serious Bush misstep.
Kathy, I’m for your friendly linguistic amendment.
Your suggestion led me to check the expression “shock and awe,” which has quite a write-up in Wikipedia. Now it’s up to Linda to popularize the shock and awerange movement so that it earns a place in Wikipedia as well.
Given how Wikipedia entries come about, I guess any us could compose it. Let’s see if Linda grants us permission to use her movement-initiating photo in the entry!
That would be so cool. I do believe that someone with a little bit more knowledge can easily set up a page for people. I tried but am missing something. My friend Ty Marshal has a wiki that mentions him for an interesting art project.
I have a great series of images with an orange and I would gladly share them, in still or when my video is complete, and I might add, my pics were first. However my dear niece is the genius with the larger audience. That counts more in the art world.
Kathy and Will, I haven’t any idea of how to add something to Wikpedia, but I’ll send you both a low-res copy of the photo that you can add to your new entry in Wikipedia, should you figure it out. Just give me credit for the photo in your entry, so people can look me up and buy my work when I become famous that way. 😉
P.S. Also don’t link directly to this blog entry from Wikipedia yet, so that I don’t start getting all the spam my last publically visible blog wound up getting! I’m looking forward to seeing the entry in Wikipedia, though!
Will do! I’ll reply again once it’s ready but will check everything with you and Kathy before posting to Wikipedia or other congenial Web destination. Let’s run with this!