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| Monday, 13-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Playing with cropping
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Sorry if all the photos are different sizes...
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| Sunday, 12-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Lines of a sunny afternoon
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Experimenting away, as normal
(I've took some more TV shots as well, but I'll post them tomorrow morning)
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| Thursday, 9-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Effortless Meaning
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Sunset sky, a TV, and my eyes
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| Monday, 6-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Just things
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*yawns*
*sneezes*
*yawns again*
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| Saturday, 4-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Sunset
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<i>the sun is casting shadows
an afternoon is fading
I ask, but no one knows
the answer to the question
my life is like an island
where does this ocean go?</i>
Yoko Kanno, GiTS:SAC OST
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| Thursday, 2-Sep-2004 00:00 |
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Courting Shadows
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shadow
\"""Shad"ow\""" (sh[a^]d"[-o]), n. [Originally the same word as shade. [root]162. See Shade.] 1. Shade within defined limits; obscurity or deprivation of light, apparent on a surface, and representing the form of the body which intercepts the rays of light; as, the shadow of a man, of a tree, or of a tower. See the Note under Shade, n., 1.
2. Darkness; shade; obscurity.
Night's sable shadows from the ocean rise. --Denham.
3. A shaded place; shelter; protection; security.
In secret shadow from the sunny ray, On a sweet bed of lilies softly laid. --Spenser.
4. A reflected image, as in a mirror or in water. --Shak.
5. That which follows or attends a person or thing like a shadow; an inseparable companion; hence, an obsequious follower.
Sin and her shadow Death. --Milton.
6. A spirit; a ghost; a shade; a phantom. ``Hence, horrible shadow!'' --Shak.
7. An imperfect and faint representation; adumbration; indistinct image; dim bodying forth; hence, mystical representation; type.
The law having a shadow of good things to come. --Heb. x. 1.
[Types] and shadows of that destined seed. --Milton.
8. A small degree; a shade. ``No variableness, neither shadow of turning.'' --James i. 17.
9. An uninvited guest coming with one who is invited. [A Latinism] --Nares.
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| Saturday, 28-Aug-2004 00:00 |
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Doodles in the Morning
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A quiet few hours spent idly drawing makes me happy taking random photos makes me happier
My mind always seems to find the melancholy in the ordinary...
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| Wednesday, 25-Aug-2004 00:00 |
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Six
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six
(siks) n.
1. The cardinal number equal to 5 + 1.
2. The sixth in a set or sequence.
3. Something having six parts, units, or members, especially a motor vehicle having six cylinders.
Idiom:
at sixes and sevens
In a state of confusion or disorder.
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| Tuesday, 24-Aug-2004 00:00 |
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Strange little things
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Make the world go round
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| Monday, 23-Aug-2004 00:00 |
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In conclusion (for but a moment)
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slip
v. slipped, slip·ping, slips
v. intr.
1.
a) To move smoothly, easily, and quietly: slipped into bed.
b) To move stealthily; steal.
2. To pass gradually, easily, or imperceptibly: â??It is necessary to write, if the days are not to slip emptily byâ?? (Vita Sackville-West).
3.
a) To slide involuntarily and lose one's balance or foothold.
b) To slide out of place; shift position: The gear slipped.
4. To escape, as from a grasp, fastening, or restraint: slipped away from his pursuers.
5. To decline from a former or standard level; fall off.
6. To fall behind a scheduled production rate.
7. To fall into fault or error. Often used with up.
(more tomorrow)
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