


I rarely photograph primary colors. I grew up in a household where paints were rigidly sequestered in their tubes and only sparingly dabbed onto precious watercolor paper. But outside, even primary colors are rarely static.
Of course, sometimes color itself is an illusion. Georgetown, Massachusetts’ reservoir is not filled with scarlet water. Portsmouth, New Hampshire’s colonial-era waterfront is not actually bathed in yellow. No ancient cobalt fish, nor any color at all, resides within the soapstone slab below; it is plebeian daylight refracted through dishwashing liquid.



In general, I find pure and primary colors less interesting to capture. I’m drawn to gradations. To transfigured, quickly changing–even messy and decaying–colors all along each spectrum. One kind of magic happens as opposites on the color spectrum gather, in autumn leaves and gardens and water and sky.
And the changes are always worth waiting for. The slightest disturbance to a pure red sunset over water may turn it into strings of rubies over rippled black velvet, and to violet dragon’s breath clouds.










You may prefer colour gradations but your primaries are just as wonderful π Lovely post, Stephanie, your first sunset is breathtaking.
Thank you so much! That first sunset was the most true red I’ve ever seen, a study in scarlet.
Beautiful images and reflections. I think I like it all. If pushed, I would definitely lean towards a preference for black and white.
I’ve really neglected black & white–you do it so well!
Thanks!
Beautiful images and color. Thanks for visiting and following my blog.
Thank you, Anne!
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Gorgeous images that just shine off the page!
Thank you!