
Today's Photojojo is No. 67. I'm not sure where Nancy took the candy counter photo; it is paired with my picture of leaves on the stairs of the parking structure.


I also did a commissioned art project over the weekend. A friend of mine is giving jewelry to her family as gifts for Christmas. She wanted an art box to enclose each gift, so I did these boxes which have her mother's photo on them. There are eight in all - seven smaller and one larger for the client. I hope she likes them! 
I've also been planning my next print effort. I'm thinking about see saws, my childhood and quilts. I did a pro-form of the piece I want to start with. The photos of the man, collaged on as would be the case in the final piece, are just placeholders. What is significant about them is that there are two different photos of the same person. The placeholder images I used were from carte de visites, a predecessor to our modern day business card in the mid-1800s. These carte de visites were signficant in that the photographers of the day, using what were then recent technological developments (ha ha, no pun intended) were able to get eight exposures of the sitting client onto one piece of photo paper. There was something about the camera that took two exposures at one time and a way to move the negative over so that they got another two slightly different posed shots.
Anyway, I am working with these ideas and hope to have more time over the holiday break to explore more.
Photojojo#64 is the holiday colors by Nancy with some cookies for Marisa (Laura).
I have never seen 109 santas all at one time - have you? They were out in force at work today, caroling through the buildings and spreading holiday cheer. Nancy's photo of the day's news is a good fit.
Photojojo#60 is Riley at the vet (Nancy) and a mailbox at the post office (me). I dreaded going there to send a package because I might experience the package mailing crush, but I was the only one in the place at 6 pm on a Monday night. Yay!
Photojojo#61 catches us up. Nancy's photo of the dog bone diagram goes with my Tow Away zone markings on the curb.
Now, back to holiday shopping on-line.










A fish ladder, also known as a fishway, fish pass or fish steps, is a structure on or around artificial barriers (such as dams and locks) to facilitate diadromous fishes' natural migration. Most fishways enable fish to pass around the barriers by swimming and leaping up a series of relatively low steps (hence the term ladder) into the waters on the other side. The velocity of water falling over the steps has to be great enough to attract the fish to the ladder, but it cannot be so great that it washes fish back downstream or exhausts them to the point of inability to continue their journey upriver.