Nice image: not only oysters make pearls and there are many artists of the sand. Here’s a vanity link about the sea as artist that you might like. I wrote the original when I was teaching year 11 English, to prove I could do a writing task I asked them to do. (In Broken Hill the sea as artist was my take on something more generic!)
Maybe, but not as photographic subjects. I can see them as delicate abstract prints on silk for clothes. Our friends at Newcastle’s Timeless Textiles gallery would think so too.
Remarkable, one looks like a handful of pearls has been sprinkled on the sand!
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Nice image: not only oysters make pearls and there are many artists of the sand. Here’s a vanity link about the sea as artist that you might like. I wrote the original when I was teaching year 11 English, to prove I could do a writing task I asked them to do. (In Broken Hill the sea as artist was my take on something more generic!)
https://morselsandscraps.wordpress.com/2013/12/08/the-sea-as-artist/
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handkerchief beach – there has to be a story in that name, surely?
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No doubt a reason – but I can’t find it. Although I’ve just thought of a few possible leads.
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So much movement in these Meg, and what variety! You reveal a beauty I would never have noticed.
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Thank you, my dear, but my bet is you would have!
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Maybe, but not as photographic subjects. I can see them as delicate abstract prints on silk for clothes. Our friends at Newcastle’s Timeless Textiles gallery would think so too.
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