Category Archives: Photography

necklace man

A tiny room off the nave and sanctuary had beautiful marble sculptures that held great meaning. Some people found great religious significance in them; I found photographic solace there.

Capella del Crocifisso – Duomo di Monreale
Monreale, Sicily
photographed 1.30.2025

the way the light hits

One year ago, I was in Sicily on a photography trip. I was with my friends and we had the best time enjoying the culture, the education, the food, the photography, and our time together. I still think about it almost every day. (Because I am comfortable living a year in the past, I guess?)

The late afternoon light at the cloisters beside the cathedral in Monreale was beautiful, bringing out the reds and oranges in the old stone. Look at the tops of those columns: every one is different.

Also, speaking of reds and oranges, I am at least 100% certain that when we returned to Palermo later that night, we had a few Aperol spritzes – each one served with a slice of an in-season Sicilian orange.

Chiostro dei Benedettini
Monreale, Sicily
photographed 1.30.2025

snow music

Good news! This is the last of my nonsense mined from that nomenclature of colors book*. Yay!!

And in a surprising plot twist, today I’m moving from discussing shades of orange to talking about the dark pink part of this sign. Or, as the book would call it, Colour 92, Lake Red. It’s “the crimson red of Werner” and features “arterial blood red, with a portion of Berlin blue”. (Again with the arterial blood red though.) In another plot twist, our pal and book author** Mr. P. Syme does not list any animals that have this color, which is a bit of a disappointment, if I’m being honest; it is, though, a featured color of the Rose Officinalus.

the snow day series
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 1.24.2026

*I don’t know where I got this crazy nomenclature of colors book. But it resides on a shelf alongside a book called COLORSTROLOGY; What Your Birthday Color Says About You and the second edition (because duh) of A Dictionary of Symbols (which is obviously not to be confused with the Penguin reference edition of Dictionary of Symbols, which also lives nearby.***)

**If it’s spelled “colour” don’t you think “author” ought to be spelled “authour”?

***So if, at any point you may have thought I was normal, this bibliography probably helped you change your mind.

the string band got a cold gig

To save time, I’ve shortened the name of my new favorite book* to WNoCwaaaaaatrihutthAASpZBCMaMAtaesfwkitAVAMK. No need to thank me.

This is a lovely piece of public art, made by BC Gilbert, called the Friendly Cowboy Western String Band (or, if you want, TFCWSB.) The guy on the left is definitely Colour 76, Dutch Orange, which as you probably already know is “the orange yellow of Werner…gamboge yellow, with carmine.” It resembles, of course, the Seedpod of the Spindle-tree.

the snow day series
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 1.24.2026

*More commonly known as simply Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours, but it’s got one hell of a subtitle.

orange and blue and green

Now, then, about this book Werner’s Nomenclature of Colours…the full title has 44 words, which makes me realize how the title for my masters thesis fell far, far short of an impressive length.

I believe that the flower-painter* dude would agree that this shade is similar to Colour 78 – Orpiment Orange, described as “the characteristic color…about equal parts of gamboge yellow and arterial blood red.” That description raises a couple of questions:

  1. What is it characteristic OF?
  2. And gamboge yellow is what color?
  3. “Arterial blood red” – do what, now?
  4. And, the obvious question – what/who is an “orpiment”?

But I guess we can all agree that the book got it right when it says the color (“colour”) is similar to the “Belly of the Warty Newt.”

the snow day series
Lubbock, Texas
photographed 1.24.2026

*When my granddaughter Hannah was little, she aspired to be a flower-picker. She’s now in college studying international politics, which is practically the very same thing.