07-18-2014, 03:33 AM
Yes, the image has a literal (subconsciously intentional) fit to it. It started as a row of hills (turn it counterclockwise to see
them) in the background of a foreground that was never added. I was looking for some abstracted 'bones' and, it being white,
I picked it out. It seemed a bit stubby for bones, so I stretched it out to make 'them' longer and rotated it clockwise to fit
the panorama-friendly dimensions of the web page (well, ok, if you think "scroll" then a webpage is a most wonderful vertical
thingee and poems with really short lines work just great when run beside or within ray went on and on babbling...).
The 'beach' was serendipitous; but, now that it's been pointed out to me, I'm hereby swearing it was intentional.
them) in the background of a foreground that was never added. I was looking for some abstracted 'bones' and, it being white,
I picked it out. It seemed a bit stubby for bones, so I stretched it out to make 'them' longer and rotated it clockwise to fit
the panorama-friendly dimensions of the web page (well, ok, if you think "scroll" then a webpage is a most wonderful vertical
thingee and poems with really short lines work just great when run beside or within ray went on and on babbling...).
The 'beach' was serendipitous; but, now that it's been pointed out to me, I'm hereby swearing it was intentional.
a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions

