Sally challenged me to take a white on white photo.
I've never tried it before so really enjoyed something new. The added bonus is that, having found white duck eggs, we can have a duck egg omelette tonight.
If you've got the time I think this one looks much better large on black.
I think this is without doubt the whitest 'white-on-white' I've ever seen! I've also learned something as I thought all Duck eggs were a pale bluey green. Your lighting is exquisite Joy to mould the shadows to form shapes from what looks to me to be a uniform colour wash. Excellent photography and a Fav for me.
I bow down to you for this. I had the same challenge and my first attempt was just playing with snow but now I feel I need to push a little harder to even come close to this.
Great image! I'm your get pushed partner for the week. :) I've been looking through your photos. You have such talent. I'm sad that you feel your mojo has been lost. Let's try to get it back! My challenge is inspired by this article: http://davidduchemin.com/2014/09/finding-your-mojo/
I loved his quote, "very few things, once lost, come looking for us. That’s our job". So, this week, I challenge you to go back to where you last felt the inspiration and shoot as many photos as you can. You can take pictures of anything you'd like, but these are some of my ideas for getting your mojo back: Find something there that catches your curiosity, look at the place from a different point of view, or bring other photographers with you to feed off their creative juices.
@ludgate Hi - many thanks for your kind words and brilliant link for finding my lost mojo. A bit weighed down with all things Christmassy at the moment so I'm calling off the mojo search until January. Even so I'll try and find a bit of inspiration for your challenge. I'm thinking of a challenge for you.
I loved his quote, "very few things, once lost, come looking for us. That’s our job". So, this week, I challenge you to go back to where you last felt the inspiration and shoot as many photos as you can. You can take pictures of anything you'd like, but these are some of my ideas for getting your mojo back: Find something there that catches your curiosity, look at the place from a different point of view, or bring other photographers with you to feed off their creative juices.