bauble
My wife, Kate, had to go in to work and I have spent the whole day with Jack. I was hoping to get a nice shot of him for today's blip, but he wasn't in the mood to be photographed.
Instead I started taking shots of colours and coloured things around the house. We have a number of glass baubles hung in the windows of the cottage which, in the light from todays sun, looked magnificent. I wish I could post more of them, but alas no.
The one I've chosen is a close up of a blown glass ball which never seemed to look as nice as it did today through my viewfinder. I was tempted to photoshop the image - having taken it on one of my cameras this time - but in the end, and after discarding the results of numerous photoshop efforts, I decided to load the raw image.
Behind the bauble, through the leaded panes, is our front garden and just left of centre - and slightly down - you can see the garden gate.
A bauble was originally a stick with a weight attached, used in weighting a child's toy, but especially the mock symbol of office carried by a court jester. This fool's bauble was a baton terminating in a figure of Folly with cap and bells, and sometimes having a bladder fastened to the other end. Subsequently it became a term for anything trivial or childishly folly.
More recently the term means a virtually worthless decorative object.
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- Canon DIGITAL IXUS 850 IS
- 1/50
- f/2.8
- 5mm
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