Things that Look Like Clouds
Forums › The Cloud Forum › Things that Look Like Clouds
- This topic has 9 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 5 years, 11 months ago by Don Hatfield.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
December 20, 2018 at 5:06 am #320806Don HatfieldParticipant
There seems to be a lot of photos on “clouds that look like things” – for instance The Grim Reaper on Cloud_a_day the other day, etc, etc etc.
So I thought it was time we reversed that. Hence this thread –
inspired somewhat by the Cloud-A-Day from quite awhile back showing stacked lenticulars juxtaposed with a photo of the Guggenheim Museum in NYCity.This hotel ceiling in Dallas beats our typical BBS any day.
-
December 20, 2018 at 11:55 am #320886Hans StockerParticipant
Nice imitative Don to start this thread. It immediately made me remember an exhibition here in Haarlem, where I live, about Dutch skies by Dutch artists. Fortunately not many BBS’s over here!
I spotted this cumulus at the exhibition.
A true Thing, meant to look like a cloud (underneath in the spot light a small sun bathing figure in a beach chair).
On the same exhibition a Dutch artist also made clouds inside. I wasn’t there at the right moment, but I found this link with pictures of his work. The article is in Dutch, but the pictures speak for themselves.
Maybe showing not true “things” that look like clouds, but being artificial still nice to share over here.
-
December 21, 2018 at 2:56 am #321039Patricia L KeelinParticipant
A funny coincidence happened today with the launch of this new topic (Thank you, Don!) and the receipt of an unexpected and most unusual gift from a friend who also shares the paredolia gene. An attached note to the single cloth doily asked if it might be a cloud. How inspiring, I thought, and created the image below to serve as a reply.
Moonlit Antimacassars
-
December 22, 2018 at 9:57 pm #321430Don HatfieldParticipant
Keelin – Thanks for this; what a creative combination. Hans – I bet the exhibition was awesome.
Pushing a little bit on the boundaries – –
“And to my complete surprise, you and I were dancing on a cloud somewhere”
–Song written by Mack Gordon & Josef Myrow
-From the film “My Baby Smiles at Me” (1948)
-
December 23, 2018 at 7:36 pm #321567Hans StockerParticipant
Don, it seems not to be only you who pushes a bit on the boundaries. Quite some daredevils you spotted dancing on clouds, or should I say spidermen? Marvelous!
I like this topic you started. Moonlit Antimaccassars is already very surprising. I will keep my eyes open from now on because my archive will not contain many pictures that might fit.
Yet I found after some digging next cloudy sky spotted in a museum for glass and art (or vice versa), France 2016. No umbrella needed inside?
-
December 23, 2018 at 10:01 pm #321607Don HatfieldParticipant
Hans – the simulated raindrops make me wonder if I need a simulated umbrella after all.
-
December 26, 2018 at 12:22 am #322134Howard BrownParticipant
6loud Story (q.v. in Search):
Christmas morn
Pink doth warn
– overcast
N.B. Having login problems so can’t get to my old 6loud Story thread
-
December 26, 2018 at 3:56 am #322155Don HatfieldParticipant
I think that every CAS member dreams of having their own personal cloud.
-
December 26, 2018 at 5:12 pm #322234Hans StockerParticipant
Hygge: nice haiku-like poem (at least your former one one on your 6loud Story thread was not meant to be one?). Short and powerful in its meaning.
As to the practical point about accessing the forum remember to first login and whenever you go to another page (for example the forum) and find yourself logged out so you can’t post a reply then do a refresh of the page. This seems to help.
Don: what is your secret of this cloud hanging above you. Did Berndhaut Smilde pay you a visit and told you how to make one of your own? Fantastic! I would also like one above me.
This all made me remember “The man who measures the clouds” who I once saw on a exhibition of work by Jean Fabre. I have a picture of my own but with a background of a BBS so I use one from the internet.
The man who measures the clouds.
In homage to his dead twin brother Emile Fabre, the artist Jean Fabre attempts to measure the immeasurable: the clouds. This action, which led to the famous bronze sculpture, is based on a quote from the prisoner and ornithologist Robert Stroud after his release: ‘I’m going to measure the clouds’.
-
December 26, 2018 at 8:59 pm #322255Don HatfieldParticipant
Hygge – I also thought the haiku was very moving. Thank you for your poetic effort. And I hope your log-in issues are over. Just FYI, clearing the history and/or cache might also work (it helps my wife).
Hans – This is not me, but another CAS member, one I’m a tiny bit envious of.
The secret : warm water and a cup to hold it in (you can see the cup in his left hand, at the point this photo was taken), very cold air, and a strong (or maybe not) throwing arm. Voila! Instant cloud. (Classic cloud creation technique.)
Also – Apparently R Stroud got right to it. I wonder what measurements (or whatever else) he recorded.
-
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.