Showing posts with label six. Show all posts
Showing posts with label six. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2016

Sixes on the Sixth Month and the Sixth Day



Here are a few sixes to celebrate the 6th of June, the sixth month of the year.

The first "6" was made a very long time ago, so long ago that I no longer know all the various components that went into it. But I do like the somewhat monochromatic and textural look that it has.

And then there's my "Numerical Flotation Device" picture with its bold colors and overall weirdness.

And finally another number "6" made of photographs of a metal grid, a bit of sidewalk, and a brass number. At least I think that's what's in there because again, this one's fairly old.

Welcome to June 6th. D-Day. And Abby's birthday. She's 12 now. With our luck, she'll probably live to be 35.

©Carol Leigh
All text, photographs, and other media are ©Copyright Carol Leigh (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from Carol Leigh.

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

RABBIT! RABBIT! RABBIT!



It's June. Already. And so I offer you a trio of sixes to mark the arrival of the sixth month.

I've always loved photographing numbers, and now that I'm proficient in making photomontages, the joy increases exponentially. (Not that I know what "exponentially" means.)

Our friends have departed, alas, so today it's back to work. There are rhodies to be deadheaded, lawns to be mowed, laundry to be done. But bright yellow irises have shown up out front, so I anticipate a bit of photography will sneak its way in there sometime as well.

More guests arrive in a couple weeks, and how wonderful it is that we can greet and feed these people in such a lush and luscious environment.

Oh, and if it's not too late to remind you . . . On this, the first day of the month, it brings good luck to say "rabbit, rabbit, rabbit." It must be the first thing you say today, and you must say it aloud. So if you've not spoken to anyone yet, yell out "rabbit, rabbit, rabbit" and see if your luck changes this month.

How could it hurt?

RABBIT!
RABBIT!
RABBIT!

©Carol Leigh
All text, photographs, and other media are ©Copyright Carol Leigh (or others when indicated) and are not in the public domain and may not be used on websites, blogs, or in other media without advance permission from Carol Leigh.

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Treasure!


When I saw it at the flea market, I was drawn to it like a zombie to whatever zombies are drawn to. I saw nothing else. It was a worn, weathered wooden box with all sorts of torn labels on it. Small, but it weighed a ton. Four metal rods with bolts held the whole thing together at the corners.

It didn't matter what was in it. It looked amazing and it felt most impressive.

As a little girl, I was attracted to pirate chests, boxes, the mysteries of what might be inside. Jewels? Gold? Maps to buried treasure? Childhood memories welled up as I gazed at this incredible box.

Chris (luckily — or not — a fellow boxophile) and I fumbled at the bolts, quickly unscrewing them to lift the lid and see the contents.

It was a box of glass slides. Glass lantern slides. An educational travelogue from the 1920s or 1930s, designed to be shipped to educators here and there, to show students photos of other countries. Included in the box was a typewritten script, on onionskin paper, for the lecturer to follow as the photographs appeared on the screen.

The glass slides depict scenes in Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. Naturally, I would have preferred a set of slides depicting America's national parks, but frankly, the slides were a bonus! It was the BOX that was magical.

Yesterday I began photographing the outside of the box. Oh, man! Peeling paper. Crackled paint. Numbers. Letters. Torn postage stamps. Grunge.

As an aside: When I begin a photomontage, sometimes I purposely start with a square format. In this case, I began with a rectangular format. When I do this, however, I always look to see if the piece would be more effective as a square. Sometimes it is, sometimes not. In this case, I just don't know. I like the horizontal sweep of the rectangular format, but also like the impact of the square. What do you think?

It's something for you to consider with your own work. Just for the heck of it, try squarifying some of your photos to see what happens. Using the crop tool, create a second — square — composition just to see what happens. You might be amazed.

But not as amazed as I am right now with this funky old wooden box, I'll wager! Treasure without. Treasure within. And more to come. ©Carol Leigh

Sunday, November 30, 2008

San Miguel de Allende Six

Having just spent a week in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, I've come home with an amazing amount of material to work with. This is my first photomontage from the trip. I combined texture from two different walls, a big number six, hand-painted flowers and flourishes from a third wall, a photo of a heart I found above a door, the words "San Miguel de Allende" from a tobacco shop, and a number three found I don't remember where. Not yet available for sale. ©Carol Leigh

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

Salvage Six

Here I combined a photograph of a fishing buoy with a photo taken of an old car in a salvage yard. The splotches behind the "6?" Raindrops on metal. Not yet available for sale. ©Carol Leigh For more photomontages, please visit http://www.carolleigh.net

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Six West

A colorful fishing buoy combines with a number I photographed on the side of a fishing boat. I added a "W" I found on a sign in Portland, Oregon, some strings, a compass rose, and that's it. Not yet available for sale. ©Carol Leigh For more photomontages, please visit http://www.carolleigh.net