I would include the artistry of sunrise, especially as I live in a hilly region where shadows form in unpredictable patterns. — Vera Mont
I do love that picture! — Vera Mont
The larches turn gold;/ another year is ending, / sunsets burn brightly — Vera Mont
Larches are my favourite tree and they're magnificent in October. — Vera Mont
Almost bare now. — Vera Mont
On the other hand, I also feel attached to cherry trees due to my passion for Japanese culture — javi2541997
A few years ago, I heard from a girl who is a mathematician - that the sunset doesn't have any poetical nor artistic vibe, and it is a concept of astronomy. — javi2541997
Please don't assume mathematicians are like this in general. Among then you will find musicians and artists. We are not bean counters. :cool: — jgill
she's just very young and earnest and has not yet discovered that you can have both scientific rigour and aesthetic awareness. — Vera Mont
Larches are my favourite tree and they're magnificent in October. Almost bare now. — Vera Mont
Van Gogh was especially attracted to cypresses and olives, presumably because of their visual drama. I've thought about how and when we form these attachments to a particular tree. In my mother's case, she grew up by a river fringed with willows and spent many happy hours in their shade, before WWII altered her life and her world. I saw my first larch at 14, when we bought a little property in rural Ontario. I was captivated by their gentleness compared to the pines and spruces they resemble, their silence and their changes of colour over the season. — Vera Mont
elms — javi2541997
cherry trees — javi2541997
Both November and December provide us with very gorgeous sunsets in the afternoons of our cities, neighbourhoods, parks, etc. — javi2541997
I'm using all this as an excuse to write about trees I like...
My favourite kind of tree is the pine. It's partly to do with the beautiful coastal pine forests of the Mediterranean, which I experienced at about ten years old on holiday in Catalonia and never forgot. — Jamal
More recently, I had a couple of big sprawling pine trees in my garden in Spain, which harboured a small ecosystem of beasts and birds. — Jamal
I think I'm more of a sunrise man :grin: — Jamal
Beautiful sunset. It doesn't make me feel like crying, but I smile whenever an explosion of crimson/salmon color so low that it's literally a backdrop of an otherwise plain road and buildings stops me in the middle of the road.when I appreciate the sunset of my city I want to cry. This crying is not a cause of sadness, but the sublime artistic sense of the sunset. — javi2541997
Good choice!My favourite kind of tree is the pine. — Jamal
I've seen this done in the front yard of an apartment building. The landscaper literally trained 3 pine trees to grow lying down then curving upward. You've got to have a lot of space for this. lol.sprawling pine trees in my garden in Spain — Jamal
They're mesmerizing.birch, and cedar — Jamal
but I smile whenever an explosion of crimson/salmon color so low that it's literally a backdrop of an otherwise plain road and buildings stops me in the middle of the road. — L'éléphant
I cannot always leave the building in time so that I am there to witness the explosion. It's a grand show, no tickets needed.When I get out of the building I work and study in, it is around 17:30 pm or even 18:00. The sun is in the last moments of the day, — javi2541997
The break of dawn is equally beautiful. I actually prefer the break of dawn, but for this, you need to have an unobstructed view of the mountain.Not surprising, then, they figure so largely in painting and literature. — Vera Mont
I cannot always leave the building in time so that I am there to witness the explosion. It's a grand show, no tickets needed. — L'éléphant
Not surprising, then, they figure so largely in painting and literature. — Vera Mont
Are you studying pathology? — Vera Mont
You kind of reminded me to give more play to sunsets in the novel I've just started. — Vera Mont
this one takes place in the north-west of England - lots of hills and water, and no city lights. I wish I could go there to see what the light is actually like, but will have to settle for pictures. Don't we just love Google? — Vera Mont
Before, I was a little preoccupied with sunrise; this one takes place in the north-west of England - lots of hills and water, and no city lights. I wish I could go there to see what the light is actually like, but will have to settle for pictures. — Vera Mont
Mind you, some parts of rural Ontario are none too shabby, either. There is a little observatory north of Wiarton, where some great summer skies are to be seen ... if you don't mind being eaten alive by mosquitoes.
We live on the east side of a highway, facing the sunset over fields - not bad - with thickly wooded low hills behind us. Not much for sunrises, but I saw a moonrise once (c1999) that almost had me calling out the fire department, it looked so much like the start of a forest fire. — Vera Mont
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