Welcome back!
I spotted this image and knew that it was going to be part of today’s theme.

It was a beautiful summer Sunday today – a great day to get outside and walk around. Although I started my walk by looking for little details, I ended up finding a lot of colour along the way. Cheerful colours that I want to share with you.
below: Colours like this red van parked in the partial shade of a tree.

below: Or the blue of the sky. Streetcar wires – hard to ignore when you’re downtown.

below: The painting of a young woman’s face on the wall of the Cameron House was partially obscured by construction equipment as the work on Queen Street West water pipes continues. I tried to find a way of taking her picture without the obstacles. Pink and flesh tones.

below: Instructions that are hard to miss! Not sure which one is the doorbell though!

below: I very carefully lined up the picture on the metal box (painted by elicser) with the diamond pattern on the Pizza Pizza wall when along came a streetcar. Photobombed by a streetcar. What is the girl holding? I’ve passed her many times (she’s on the corner of Queen St. West and Spadina) but I’ve never looked closely at her. I always assumed that it was a mug with something hot in it – doesn’t that look like steam? Tonight I realized that it’s a smartphone and that’s not steam, it’s light.

below: To take good pictures doesn’t require a fancy camera. Great photos have been taken with phones and bad photos have been taken with expensive equipment and I’m sure that’s not new to you. I only mention it because where equipment sometimes matters is the type of pictures that can be produced. Today I was walking with a telephoto lens that was useless for things close to me but fabulous for distance. Best distance – across the street, like the photo below. It was the bright blue and white stools that caught me attention. It wasn’t until I was lining up the shot that I saw the people (an added bonus!).

below: While on the subject of stools, these were close by the ones above. In this case I cropped out most of the people. Keep it simple and keep those shoes in the center! I just want to add that different cameras or different lenses impact how I look at the world when I walk. Do I zoom in on details? Or do I go for the wider story?

below: More yellow. Yellow gas pipes. They are everywhere.

below: Flowers in bloom but no idling here.

below: Green. Shadowy. Incomplete.

below: This is almost too cliched (add the accent to get the correct spelling!). But when the two taxis drove into the picture I had to take it as an “orange picture”. You can add the comment about Toronto’s two seasons here – I know you know it!

below: Purple wall with a doll. I’m going to assume that it is a lost doll. Someone dropped it and didn’t notice and then someone picked it up off the ground and tucked its arm into the wire to keep it safe and visible.

below: The colour of the curtain in the window above a store caught my eye and then I noticed the book holding open the window. Oops another case of ‘look again’. It’s not a book, it’s a box that once held a Razor kick scooter.

below: Abstract. I vaguely remember painting something similar back in Junior High. It involved masking tape and I never got the lines right. The paint always leaked under the tape. Do you recognize the building?

below: Behind the painted metal grille is a small colourful Stikman in his little frame.

below: I will admit that my first reaction when I saw this, small and close to the ground, was “I’ve found Jesus”. Not as bright and cheery as the other pictures but alas brown and grey are colours too.

below: And last, the perfect colour at the end of a walk… a beer on a patio with a friend.

#mycuriouseyes
A large part of the inspiration for this blog post came from participating in a week long photography project called ‘My Curious Eyes’. Each day we were challenged/encouraged to find interesting things to photograph based on prompts such as shape, colour, and texture. Part of the project was to photograph things that we hadn’t noticed before, or to look at ordinary things in a different way.