"Dark Side" Feel Free To Add Your Dark Or Spooky Photos To The Thread.
Linda2 wrote:
Love the mysteries of the "dark side"
One of my paintings.
Fun post!
Groovy Baby... is that Alfred H on the left?
Seen in a regional cemetary.
RichardTaylor wrote:
Seen in a regional cemetary.
That's nailing the theme... Bravo!
Abo wrote:
That's nailing the theme... Bravo!
Thanks. There was a dead rabbit nearby.
Abo wrote:
That'd be good... you got anything along those lines?
No, unfortunately.
We rarely get fog in Southeastern PA, but the next trip to Acadia/Mount Desert Island I will certainly look for some stuff.
The first image below was the original image in a style I dubbed "Tempest Lighting", but it fits equally well in darkside methinks.
And then I got caught up in the moment and kept going .....
Longshadow wrote:
Cool!
Waiting for the Headless Horseman by chance?
Growing up in upstate NY, that was my first, ONLY, thought. We heard much about Icabod Crane.
Dennis
Longshadow, I present to you a horseman whose head was "cut off", albeit, only by the picture frame.
During the American Revolutionary War, armies had to walk many, many miles between engagements. They discovered that if an infantryman could hold on to the stirrup of a calvaryman's horse, it supported his weight to a small degree, and they could walk further and faster. They developed a rotation scheme such that a soldier would hold onto the left stirrup for a half hour, then let go, walk around the horse and hold onto the right stirrup for a half hour, then let go altogether to wait for another rotation. In the meantime, another soldier had taken his place and proceeded through each step as before. And each calvary horse had a small cadre of infantryman trailing along beside it. Quite a sight.
Old Truck by the Lake with Girl. A photo from my archives that I still work on occasionally.
Bob Yankle wrote:
Longshadow, I present to you a horseman whose head was "cut off", albeit, only by the picture frame.
During the American Revolutionary War, armies had to walk many, many miles between engagements. They discovered that if an infantryman could hold on to the stirrup of a calvaryman's horse, it supported his weight to a small degree, and they could walk further and faster. They developed a rotation scheme such that a soldier would hold onto the left stirrup for a half hour, then let go, walk around the horse and hold onto the right stirrup for a half hour, then let go altogether to wait for another rotation. In the meantime, another soldier had taken his place and proceeded through each step as before. And each calvary horse had a small cadre of infantryman trailing along beside it. Quite a sight.
Longshadow, I present to you a horseman whose head... (
show quote)
Interesting history, but where are the spooky trees?
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