


A ferris wheel, that is.
Linked to The Cosmic Photo Challenge. More photos from above can be found here.




A ferris wheel, that is.
Linked to The Cosmic Photo Challenge. More photos from above can be found here.

Schifferstadt is a town on the Rhine near Ludwigshafen. The old part has many half-timbered houses dating back several centuries – many are restored or are in the process of being restored.

Traditionally, these houses show the contrast between the dark brown or black wooden beams and the whitewashed mortar pieces in between.

Sometimes these colours are offset by colourful, often red, shudders.

Green is also a favourite, for shudders as well as for window frames.

However, in recent years more and more half-timbered houses have started to sport a coat of paint, ranging from soft pink like the one below to really dark or bright colours.

Often the panels are accentuated with two-tone coloured paint. The writing on the beam reads: Joseph Maier and his wife Katharina built this house in the year of the Lord 1835 (Dieses Haus erbaute Joseph Maier und seine Ehefrau Katharina im Jahre Christi 1835).

Blue is a fashionable tint for half-timbered houses these days. It goes well with green climbers and red geraniums.
Linked to Monday Window. For more windows, click here.

Linked to Sunshine’s Macro Monday.
Where would we be without books? Where would books be if Johannes Gutenberg hadn’t invented movable letters? Probably not in a very different position than today.

No, this is not Gutenberg but Peter Schöffer. An early collaborator of Gutenberg who scholars today think was more than an apprentice but quite essential in the devolopment of book printing and publishing. The wikipedia article in German on him is much more detailed than the English one but for what it is worth if somebody is interested: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Sch%C3%B6ffer
This statue stands in Schöffer’s hometown of Gernsheim, about 50km south of Mainz, where Gutenberg lived. And as an aside: I like his legacy. It’s a very tasty beer!
And the connection to culture and alcohol is never far away in a wine growing / beer brewing area. Rheinhessen advertises this on the cable car, pure and culture rhyme in German.

Linked to One Word Sunday: Culture.
For Six Word Saturday. More six word inspired photos, can be found here.

Counting chimneys in Mainz.

What’s the collective noun for chimneys? A smoke of chimneys? I know that the collective noun for chimney sweeps is sweepdom.

I found counting chimneys much more fascinating in England and Scotland, here in Edinburgh.

How many do you count?

To counterbalance all these huddles of chimneys here is an impressive solitary one.

And what would a post about chimneys be without at least one sweep.
Linked to Cee’s On the Hunt for Joy Challenge: Counting Chimneys.


Hexagons.

Hexagons and lines.

The front of the gatehouse of the 9th-century Imperial Abbey of Lorsch in Germany. It’s one of few completely preserved buildings from the Carolingian area and is a UNESCO heritage site.
And now for something completely different:

I found this but cannot find the source:
geometry, the process:
For Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge: Any Kind of Geometric Shape. For more photos of geometric shapes, click here.


Hey, Kermit! you lost something there!

Demure and bristling, at the same time.

Baby’s got blue eyes.

Eyeing you, eyeing me.

What am I seeing?

And now it is over to you!
Linked to A Photo a Week: Eyes. More eye shots are here.

“Photography is the story I fail to put into words.”
Destin Sparks
Linked to Travel with Intent. For more photos inspired by this quote from Destin Sparks, click here.