This year at Travel Words Jude is encouraging us to think hard about colour in our photography. This is the final week for brown – earth shades. From Sunday there will be a new colour scheme to look out for.
This year at Travel Words Jude is encouraging us to think hard about colour in our photography. This is the final week for brown – earth shades. From Sunday there will be a new colour scheme to look out for.
Great selection, Tish…brown can indeed be beautiful
Thank you, Sue. I’m thinking I want to keep it going as a theme 🙂
Why not? More McMoos?
That’s a very good thought, Sue. I could have a round-up 🤣
😊😊
Brown is one of my favourite colours. Love the various hues, Tish!
Thank you, Dina.
That oak leaf is gorgeous! Thanks for finding more browns Tish. I think I started off with the perfect colour for this time of year. Let’s hope next month is as successful 😁
Am sure it will be just as successful, Jude.
Brown is beautiful.
I like earth colours generally
One kind of tunes into them.
Ooh, these are lovely earthy colours, Tish! 🙂 🙂 Shorter month next month so you’ll have to get them in kwick!
Being quick might be on hold. Fell down the ancestral rabbit hole again today. Now have scrambled brain from acquiring too many sets of grandparents.
Oo – er! Should I take some of them off your hands 🤭💕💕
They all come with enigmas attached, drat them.
🙂 🙂
Brown has so many possibilities.
It does, doesn’t it 🙂
Simply beautiful – brown’s humble nature seems to make it even more beautiful.
I think you put that very well, Emma.
Lovely photos. I especially love the old building. 🙂
Thanks for visiting, Michelle.
And for following 🙂
Most anything can be seen as beauty through the eyes of a talented photographer.
Well thank you for lovely comment, Lulu.
Beautiful browns Tish even the little outhouse conforms. . An often overlooked colour.but as you’ve so cleverly shown it is the colour of life and death. I’m so pleased Jude chose this one to start us off. A great challenge. I’m looking forward to her next choice.
It’s very thoughtful challenge, isn’t it. It’s certainly made me look at colour with my brain switched on, as a opposed to passive responding. The little outhouse was my old shed at the allotment. The next incumbent on that plot demolished it. It was on its last legs, and leaned a lot, but I liked its textures.
It certainly had a lot of rustic photographic charm
I love your wintry brown images, Tish. The one with the door ajar in the background is my favourite. 😍
I was just saying to Pauline, that the shed was my old allotment shed. Then I moved plots, and now it is no more. I loved the way it had weathered. After using it for several years I one day found a1725 ha’penny just in front of the door which was rather odd. A worm must have wormed it to the surface.
Wow! That must have been so exciting to find such a piece of history right at your feet.
It certainly was – to wonder who had dropped it.
I’m sure the loss of a ha’penny was quite devastating in the 18th century.
That was my thought too. Some lad or lass on an errand in the days when the allotment was a farm field.
Lovely browns, but you confused me. I thought the challenge ended at the end of the month like Becky’s. Silly me. 🙂
janet
Jude said we had this week as well.
Beautiful browns! I like the teasels and the veins on that oak leaf are wonderful!
Thanks, Sarah.
Great snapshots!
Thank you.
What incredible diversity. And of course brown is beautiful – even when it’sx mud
I’m having problems loving my mud, Meg, though I must admit I did take a photo of the soggy field path.
Brown in colour life can be beautiful
It certainly can.
You nailed it!
Thank you!
You’re welcome!