Kennel Bonebreaker’s – with the white clanmother Cobby’s Cirena and my boys a couple of times too!
Månad: februari 2014
Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Large Subjects
This ”eye” in the clouds opened up somewhere over Europe on our flight to Spain. For more of Large Subjects – click here.
Just Published: A Complete Photography 101 Guide
Photography!
Travel theme: Yellow
Ailsa’s travel theme this week is all about Yellow!
Weekly Photo Challenge – Selfie
A hotel entre´ I couldn’t resist! Loved the table too…but to what use it was I couldn’t guess. Being beautiful only?
For more selfies – click here.
81 dancers and some crumpled paper…
BBC – Culture – JR flyposts the New York City Ballet building.
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder
This saying first appeared in the 3rd century BC in Greek. In 1588, the English dramatist John Lyly, in his Euphues and his England, wrote:
”…as neere is Fancie to Beautie, as the pricke to the Rose, as the stalke to the rynde, as the earth to the roote.”
Shakespeare expressed a similar sentiment in Love’s Labours Lost, 1588:
Good Lord Boyet, my beauty, though but mean,
Needs not the painted flourish of your praise:
Beauty is bought by judgement of the eye,
Not utter’d by base sale of chapmen’s tongues
Benjamin Franklin, in Poor Richard’s Almanack, 1741, wrote:
Beauty, like supreme dominion
Is but supported by opinion
David Hume’s Essays, Moral and Political, 1742, include:
”Beauty in things exists merely in the mind which contemplates them.”
The person who is widely credited with coining the saying in its current form is Margaret Wolfe Hungerford (née Hamilton), who wrote many books, often under the pseudonym of ‘The Duchess’. In Molly Bawn, 1878, there’s the line ”Beauty is in the eye of the beholder”.
Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge: Small Subjects
These are silk worm cocoons made into little owls. Small subjects. A present from my children bought on their trip to Japan. They always give me owl – things, knowing I love owls. Somehow it was difficult to photograph them, not only because they are about the size of a bumble bee.
Ese’s Weekly Shoot & Quote Challenge: Fragile
True delicacy is not a fragile thing.
James Broughton








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