Each week on Wordless Wednesday, bloggers around the world post a photo they’ve taken that tells a story. I hope this one will bring to mind a memory or stimulate your imagination. Perhaps it will even inspire you to write — memoir, fiction, or a poem. If it does, please let me know in the comments or by email via the Contact tab on my home page!
Scroll through more of my photos here.
And check out this week’s Wordless Wednesday contributions from some of my Canadian writer-photographer friends, coast to coast:
Elizabeth Yeoman (Wunderkamera)
To subscribe to my blog and receive occasional posts, click HERE.
Recent posts on writing
Culture Dock: New app encourages travellers and the culturally curious to share impressions through images, guest post by Kendall Hunter
Survival: Daughter and Father Collaborate on Story of His Time as WWII Air Gunner and Prisoner of War, guest post by Barbara Trendos
Disquiet and Experimentation: Interview with writer Chloe Catan, first-prize winner in the 2015 Aspiring Canadian Poets Contest (Submissions for this year accepted as of April 2, 2016)
Seven: On learning to embrace revision, guest post by memoirist Alexandra Risen (Unearthed, forthcoming)
Imagine taking a piece of sunset sky and cutting it out like patchwork! That’s what you’ve done here … or was it the architect? What a terrific shot.
That is amazing. It’s the kind of scene that you wonder how it’s possible that traffic doesn’t come to a standstill while everyone gets out and takes a photo. I mean, who can see this and not have their jaw drop? There’s the trick though. Seeing it. I’m wondering which is the greater thrill, the in-person view or the photo. I can see it being the photo because you can really take in the wonder of it… in real life, I suspect the light didn’t last long. You just caught it perfectly!
Wouldn’t it be a hoot if this was the Honeywell building?? It looks like liquid honey, no?