Our last image [14] was taken on the Isle of Wight and is St Boniface just outside of Ventnor.
Now what do you make of this image?
15
A picture is worth a thousand words” is an English language-idiom. It refers to the notion that a complex idea can be conveyed with just a single still image or that an image of a subject conveys its meaning or essence more effectively than a description does
This saying was invented by an advertising executive, Fred R. Barnard. To promote his agency’s ads he took out an ad in Printer’s Ink in 1921 with the headline “One Look Is Worth a Thousand Words” and attributed it to an ancient Japanese philosopher.
This series will examine that very thing – …
Some look at an image and see only the image itself, others look at the same image and see something else and others still can look at an image and see a completely different picture unfolding into a journey, a memory a story to be told. I have often pondered on this topic, a picture is worth a thousand words … but what words?
Each week l shall post a different image, and each week l would like you to tell me what you see …
Your image for this week is above … what do you see?
I see either the moment captured before a an amazing day or the moment after an amazing day has been.
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Morning Patty, in fact the moment was just after everyone had packed up and left for the day 🙂
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🙂
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We don’t have them here so I’m not sure what they’re called, but are they beach ‘huts’ on the waterside?
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They are indeed exactly that Kat – with the exception of being on the seashore – never quite understood the traditional importance of them, to me they just little wooden huts that seem to have at times more security on them than Fort Knox 🙂
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I’ve always liked that they’re so colourful 🙂
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