Tag Archives: Weekly Photo Challenge

It’s Not That Time of Year Unless. . .

In my family, after the tree was trimmed, the outside lights were up and that inedible Xmas candy was in the candy dish, there was just one thing that signaled Christmas: the yearly jigsaw puzzle set out on the card table that my sister and I put together but that no one could resist helping out with.  There was always that last missing piece that eventually we found on the floor under the nearby sofa or in the dog dish or someone’s pants cuff.

Last year my friends Patty and Marti and I went to my sister Patti’s house in Phoenix for Xmas and of course took a jigsaw puzzle along.  My brother-in-law Jim and the across-the-street neighbor got addicted, and we could hardly elbow our way into the action once they got started. Under strict instructions to finish it before Xmas dinner, when the counter space would be needed, we accomplished the task, with Patty doing the honors and fitting in the last piece.  It was a fun one.  What’s up this year?

(Click to enlarge photos)

 

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/time-of-year/

Chaos Theory

I just completed a mixed media assemblage titled “Chaos Theory,” but living up to its name, I forgot to photograph it before I took it to the gallery.  In lieu of it, please click on the first photo to enlarge and read the story of all of these other examples of chaos!


Since the retablo I couldn’t produce when I first did this prompt is now hanging on my wall, I put a photo of it on my blog, and you can see it HERE.

If you’d like to read the poem that goes with the Donald Trump pinata, go HERE.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/chaos/

Abstract

Please click on photos to enlarge.  I didn’t mean to include the last one, but it looks so good in the collage that I’m leaving it! You’ll see it in my earlier post today as well.

 

 

 

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/photo-challenges/abstract/

Two Virgins: A Photo a Week Challenge: One Photo, Two Treatments

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https://nadiamerrillphotography.wordpress.com/2015/08/20/a-photo-a-week-challenge-one-photo-two-treatments/

Photo a Week Challenge: Tilted

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Needless to say, the prompt was to show pictures in which we just couldn’t resist tilting the camera. I got a bit carried away with these strings of papel picada on a windy day. Believe me, there were dozens more and I exercised great restraint in only showing three.

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I took two versions of this shot of the appetizer tray at Tres Leones B&B Restaurant. Believe me, this one with a diagonal slant was by far the more interesting.

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This beautiful blue-footed booby washed ashore early one morning. I’ve shown another full shot in an earlier post, but I also love this detail.

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A Photo a Week Challenge: Tilted

Weekly Photo Prompt: Scale

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Photo Prompt–Scale: This week, share an image that highlights a size relationship — make us pause and take a second look to understand the scale of the elements in your photo.

Angular

Photo Challenge Prompt: What does “Angular” mean to you?

 

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Weekly Photo Prompt: Descent

Photo Prompt: Descent—This week, show us your interpretation of descent.

You’ve seen this shot of a hot air balloon that has burst into flame and that is plummeting toward earth once before, but it is so perfect for this prompt that it is appearing for an encore performance. I guess I should mention that it was unmanned!DSC08029

Searching for a place to land on Candelabra Island, Peru.  I believe these are cormorants but I’m open to correction! One lonely pelican seems to have gotten in with the wrong crowd.DSCF1193

Peru Desert, descending to an oasis.DSCF1251

More Peru desertDSCF1264

Amazon Sunset.  Does the descent of the sun count?DSCF1721

During the rainy season, flying termites descend by the tens of thousands, entering houses  under sliding glass doors, through keyholes and hairline cracks.  They swirl around any light like dervish planets, then chew their wings off and worm their way into any vulnerable wood.  I think they mate somewhere along the way as well, or perhaps they chew their wings off in frustration over being those wallflowers left without a mate.  At any rate, I was dumb enough to leave my pool light on and the next morning awoke to find thousands of insects such as these, pinned upside down by their wings in the water.DSC06940

Those nimble few who had managed to chew their own wings off then stood on their detached wings or the wings of others as they helped them to chew their wings off.DSC06939

Once free of their wings, they either swam to safety, found spare wings to use as flotation devices or swam off to aid other termites held captive by their wings in a crucifix position.  It was both ghastly and fascinating and a huge cleanup operation!DSC06938

Another Candelabra Island, Peru descent.DSCF1151

Thousands of white pelicans winter on Lake Chapala, Mexico, where I live. These are a very few making a landing after their descent.DSC08786

 

WordPress Weekly Photo Challenge: Cover Art

Cover Art

The challenge was to supply the cover photography and name for a book.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAA Mexican Retiree’s Guide to Sloth

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The Inept Photographer’s Guide to Beach Photography

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAFinding A Direction in Life

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PB & Jellyfish

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Natural Recipes
for Long Life and Happiness

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Pond & Garden

DSC07920Filling her Shoes
(Confessions of a Birkenstock Stepmother)

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Beach Love Affair

Light Play

Light Play: Weekly Photo Challenge—Refraction

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