Wilt thou, bloom
Part of a lamp in the morning sun
Probably the last of the winter spectacle
Amusing myself with Orion
Il faut cultiver notre jardin
I tought I taw a house finch
A little bit of purple
The Little Shopping Cart
Sparkly water
Part of a lamp in the diningroom
With full accord
Spice cupboard
Moon over neighbours
Totality
Eclipse
Jove and his youngsters
No record
Sheila's Brushdrops
Clowny
First day of spring
Good try
Perils of autofocus
Alan
Old glass, dirty glass
Flicker on the rail
Brown creeper
Yesterday's snow
Flicker in the snow storm
Snow clearing
Alley
Five and twenty gold birds
Little mester's shop
Sunny day, pigeon, flicker and wine bottles
Flicker
A and L
Winter morning window
Tunnel
Making rice
Dull day, hawks play
Cleaning out
The peanut gallery has many attendees
Birthday boy
Peanut gallery
Goldie sunning and singing
The days get longer; the tree must come down
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Window
Language historians believe that a source of our modern word window is a borrowing (a thousand years ago) from one of the Scandinavian languages (Norse, Danish, . . .). That borrowed bit was a word meaning "wind-eye" or opening through which the wind might come. This bit of a window at the Landesmuseum in Zurich won't let any wind in or out. But it is suggestive of an eye.
William (Bill) Armstrong has particularly liked this photo
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