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i have three favorite color pairs: black & white, navy blue and white, and my current crush, yellow and gray. here is what color psychologists have to say about the classic yellow and gray combination: gray is practical, timeless, solid. yellow is sunshine, laughter, happiness and good times. i’ll take that in a favorite color pair. in fact, i’ll take that in a best friend.
yellow hawthorn leaf on gray wasp nest paper
island lake trail, shoreview, minnesota
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it was the color of those leaves that caught my attention. but it was the single little striped fruit that kept me interested. like making small talk at a party with someone in a great dress, only to find out they also have a wicked sense of humor.
false solomon’s seal with red fruit in october
rice creek regional trail, saint paul, minnesota
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it makes me think of a Seuss illustration somehow, the great big stripy leaves, crooked stalk, and the itty-bitty berry…Love it.
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sure, these leaves are pretty. and technically they each serve the purpose of identifying a particular species. but their value to me is not their perfect colors or their diagnostic qualities. i picked these up in 24 different places, and i just need to look at each one to remember the location, the time of day, and even the weather. the leaves themselves don’t even exist anymore in many cases. but those places do.
a collection of found autumn leaves
all from minnesota
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i heard on the radio that photographing an event reduces your memory of that event but i experience the opposite. When i look back at photographs it triggers all sorts of memories and details that I might otherwise have forgotten. This is especially true for very old photographs of my childhood.
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some photos i’d rather forget were taken (you know, the ones of you when you weren’t camera ready…) but i truly love this collection!
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if STILL blog had a quarterly publication, this would definitely be our COLOR issue. never can i remember a more colorful two weeks. usually our autumns are stretched over six weeks: an initial two weeks of flaming sumac leaves, followed by two weeks of yellow poplar and red maples, and finally two weeks of orange and russet oaks. but this year, the whole season was condensed into the same two week period. holy moley. nothing is off limits. everything is fair game: trees are three or more colors, there are whole rows of oaks with every tree a different and distinct color. and i’m seeing every shade of orange that can be imagined: peach, salmon, coral, tangerine, tomato…
maple branch with red and yellow october leaves
from my yard, saint paul, minnesota
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Compensation for March.
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here too and i am loving every colourful moment because we all know what november looks like
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because this is the most colorful fall season i can remember, i have begun returning from my walks with a standard warning: “i’m bringing more nature into the house!” my kitchen floor may or may not still be covered with ceramic tile, but no one will know until i remove about a dozen armloads of leaves, branches, bark, grasses, fungi, seed pods, wild fruits, feathers, pine cones, rocks, birds nests, wasp nests, and at least one dead red bellied snake. all i remember is how i felt last march, when i would have given anything for a spot of color that wasn’t brown or gray. ill take all this color gratefully until it’s gone.
an assemblage of october finds
rice creek, grass lake, and sucker lake hiking trails; saint paul, minnesota
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Like how you left your signature in lower right corner.: )
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i am imagining the gathering walks you and i could have together.
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yellow and grey is one of my favourite combinations too.
And mine as well … add a splash of navy & I love it even more ! Have a great weekend, Mary-Jo & family ! oxox