My daughter-in-law came across this photograph of mine from a time I lived in rural PA. I'm not sure if the tree makes my dog look teeney tiny or if the dog (her name was Mary) makes the tree look gigantic. Either way, I figure it rather defines the word"contrast".
Very nicely shot Veronica
After reading your description I then looked at your image. It made me laugh. She looks lost in the scene. So yes it is a nice example of contrast.
I see a tad of blue in the snow, or is that my eye imagining it? The world in snow is so different in the woods easy to get lost. Surly he got home to get warm.
I grew up in Michigan. I recall one Christmas being in Sault Saint Marie upper peninsula and the steam from the power plant went up about 75 ' and came back down as a crystalline snow, that defines cold~! Burr.
I don’t know if your breeds align with ours but Mary has the look of a Border Terrier, allowing for the fact her legs have sunk into the snow a bit. They are great characters, I bet she thoroughly enjoyed the snow. The shot certainly does as you say Veronica. Great fun.
Thanks for your kind words! Mary was our precious little girl. From an early start in an adoption center, she spent her fourteen years playing in the snow, all kinds of weather, all kinds of nature's friends, even treed a bear if you can believe it. We really didn't know what her breed was, more than likely a friendly one.
veralisa296 wrote:
My daughter-in-law came across this photograph of mine from a time I lived in rural PA. I'm not sure if the tree makes my dog look teeney tiny or if the dog (her name was Mary) makes the tree look gigantic. Either way, I figure it rather defines the word"contrast".
Yes, contrast comes to mind. Nice image.
Erich
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