Sunday, January 23, 2011

Shades of Winter

I have always loved colour.  When someone asks me what my favourite colour is, I always have to hem and haw and try to come up with an answer, because truthfully, I just love all colours!   I remember in Grade 3 getting in trouble with my teacher because I coloured with too many crayons.

"Look at your sun," my teacher exclaimed in horror, "it's a messy swirl of orange and yellow and red!  See how everyone else is making their sun?  They are making them nice and neat, with a big yellow circle with rays coming out of it!  That's the way a sun is supposed to look!"  

But that's not the way the sun looked to me.  I saw it as a big swirl of many colours and that's the way I wanted to colour it.  And I didn't want my sun perched way up in one corner of the page, I wanted a big splashy sun that took over the whole page, drenching it in colours from edge to edge.  I must have been a great trial to my very old-fashioned, linear-thinking teacher!

My eyes are still constantly seeking out colour.  At this time of year, it becomes a treasure hunt for me to find as many colours as I can in the winter landscapes.





Sometimes I can find splashy bold colours, like the bright red of a male cardinal, sheltering in our rose bush.










Or bright-coloured snowsuits against a snowy white hill.










And a scarlet velvety sumac surrounded by evergreen.
















At times the colours are much more subtle, like hidden silvery green moss, secreting itself behind a waterfall.










And the olive green plumage of the female cardinal, hunting for seeds beside a white-capped sparrow.










Or the fluffy russet ears of a furry squirrel, happy to find a peanut on a cold winter day.











Sometimes the colours look chillingly beautiful, like the icy blue of frozen water around a rocky outcropping.








And a hazy orange sky over a frozen harbour.












The colours can be shy and delicate, like this pastel pink sky.











But they can also be so warm and inviting, like this sun-strewn path that lights our way home.














And finally, colours can be so very bright and cheerful, like a warm, snuggly cat curled up on a red blanket in a yellow chair, waiting for our return.




(Yes, this is my Tiger, fully recovered and happy, 5 months after her near-death experience!)

5 comments:

  1. Beautiful photos and your commentary was rather poetic. Very nice!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Your pictures and narrative was quite wonderful. And I wouldn't believe that Tiger had been through a horror if I hadn't gone through the worry with you five months ago. Tiger looks fit and ready to pounce on any mouse that enters his jurisdiction. What a difference five months can make!

    ReplyDelete
  3. You have the eyes of an artist for sure Ro. And so good to hear your sweet Tiger made a complete recovery after that harrowing ordeal you both suffered through! ~Lili

    ReplyDelete

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails