The gaps in the arcs of this Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue reveals where wheels of motorized vehicles most often roll.
Kind of like Desire Lines but for vehicles instead of Pedestrians or Cyclists.
The gaps in the arcs of this Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue reveals where wheels of motorized vehicles most often roll.
Kind of like Desire Lines but for vehicles instead of Pedestrians or Cyclists.
Hearts.
I now place them in the Centre of almost all my Labyrinths.
I add them to turn-arounds at the ends of the Lines which make up the outline of my Labyrinth Designs.
This Heart centre of my pass-through Labyrinth painted on Kensington Avenue during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market.
Without a Heart somewhere in my designs, my Labyrinths now feel incomplete.
Emotion is absent.
Adding one or more hearts, changes the entire feeling, meaning, and experience of a Labyrinth . . .
Love Button indeed.
Chose not to repaint my month-old Street Labyrinth on Kensington Avenue as the colours remained vibrant . . .
This is the Labyrinth I painted last month, during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market.
I decided NOT to repaint it this month.
Instead focused on repainting the Labyrinths at the north end of Augusta Avenue.
Perhaps I’ll refresh this in September 2019 . . .
One month old pass-through Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday Kensington Market in Downtown Toronto . . .
Outer lanes of the pass-through Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue by Fitzroy Terrace in Kensington Market, Downtown Toronto during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday.
In the top left of this image, looking closely, you can just make out the upside down Heart in the Centre of the Labyrinth.
The painted Yellow line is the curb signifying a no-parking zone.
It was Shamez’s request/suggestion that I paint at least one Labyrinth exactly here.
That way, no cars should ever be parked atop this Street Labyrinth.
The Labyrinth should remain walkable 24 / 7 !
This photograph confirms Shamez was correct . . .
Up close and in the distance, two Labyrinths I painted on Kensington Avenue during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday . . .
Almost a full month has pase, yet the Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue for the previous Pedestrian Sunday Kensington Market is still there . . .
Heart design in the Labyrinth I painted on Kensington Avenue during the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market . . .
A memory opportunity for vacationers in Downtown Toronto . . .
This was the final Labyrinth I painted on the July 2019 Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market.
It’s located on Kensington Avenue, placed mostly in front of a laneway exiting onto the street.
The asphalt is crackly and didn’t make a very good candidate for a Street Labyrinth canvas.
Yet because it is in front of a no parking zone, due to the laneway exit, it is an ideal location for a Labyrinth that can remain car-free at all hours outside of Pedestrian Sunday.
I painted this heart at the entrance of my Baltic Wheel Labyrinth Design on Kensington Avenue during the most recent Pedestrian Sunday in Kensington Market.
Round edges on either side of the Heart belong to the outer most turns during one’s Labyrinth walk . . .
I splash of blue or turquoise would improve my painted Labyrinth here on Kensington Avenue . . .
Aw well. Next time.
My painted Street Labyrinths often become focal points, stage venues for Performers . . .