
Macro Monday

Found in the glass house!
Silent Sunday

FOTD

Lens-Artists Challenge #337-Bold
Your life is your canvas, and you are the masterpiece. There are a million ways to be kind, amazing, fabulous, creative, bold, and interesting.
– Kerli
Sofia is our lovely guide this week, and she wants us to be Bold – or at least send pictures that speak bold. Please visit her beautiful site for more inspiration!

Colours and patterns in furniture – can indeed be bold. I like it, but maybe not in my own house…

Gaudi was one of the most bold architects according to me. I am looking forward to seeing a Sagrada Família fully fledged in 2026.

Last Tuesday we saw the immersive exhibition of Frida Kahlo in Malmoe. The Mexican painter and artist who was severely wounded in a bus accident at the age of 19, and lived with constant pain until her death in 1954, only 47 years old. Few people and artists were that bold and colourful as she was in both life and works.
Finally, In the true spirit of it, be bold and take us all somewhere new, Sofia says. How…? Well, you asked for it…it is rather bold of me, in this famous company, to show one of my wild paintings (I don’t call it art…)for my granddaughter. Creatures.

I am truly grateful for the many beautiful and thoughtful answers to last week’s challenge – and we all managed to post only ONE image! I guessed it would be difficult, but you really made it work – and work so well, that I had tears in my eyes more than once…
So now – welcome to this week and Sofia’s magic. Remember to link back to her post and to tag Lens-Artists so we can find you.
Stay well, keep calm and make the best of your week.
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Thursday Thoughts – The Road to Tibet II
I am revisiting the trainride to Tibet in 2009 – and sending some pictures from the train for Thursday Thoughts.
Mezmerising landscapes every day – and – going to bed for the night? We didn’t want to miss a single thing. Today I found some pictures with human connection. Nomads with Jaks grazing the slopes. A peaceful sight.

The Chinese built the railway on the permafrost, and also the existing roads. We saw mostly trucks in endless lines on those roads.

Something that maybe was built to stop snow and sand blowing onto the railway?

Meandering rivers and roads, and everywhere that enigmatic light,

and the magnificent cloudscapes over the floating, colourful landscape.

See the tiny road running close to the railway? I can only imagine the distance to those mountains…
I hope you enjoyed this piece of the Tibetan Plateau too. I do think there will be a number III next Thursday – and you are welcome to travel with me!
FOTD

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