I used reflective paint for the yellow and red concentric circle arcs in my Robson Square Labyrinth, but non-reflective paint for the blue and the green.
Something for me to consider next time I paint a Labyrinth with nighttime lighting.
I used reflective paint for the yellow and red concentric circle arcs in my Robson Square Labyrinth, but non-reflective paint for the blue and the green.
Something for me to consider next time I paint a Labyrinth with nighttime lighting.
🇨🇦 No seaside vacation for the first time. Ever. For all of us. (Good thing we swam thru late November last year.) Toronto’s wading pools saved us all. Tried, tested and highly recommended for Turkish cities as well. 🇹🇷 Sanırım hayatımız boyunca yaz… https://t.co/pMSFXVQUNH pic.twitter.com/NOataV5pS4
— Deniz Gözler Özenç (@simply_deniz) August 20, 2018
Water is where and when “Wading Pool” meets “Labyrinth”.
Rolling waves of water elevate what my Labyrinths painted upon Toronto’s Wading Pool surfaces can mean.
This video is also just nice to look at and listen to.
Hazmat suits are optional when walking the Wading Pool Labyrinth in Christie Pits Park…?
My recent repainting of two of the green arcs to a bright red, to complement the repainting of the yellows, as seen in this image really makes all the colours pop!
All three primary colours, plus green for the outside boundary, looking good!
I am grateful.
Heart to Heart.
From this perspective, yesterday’s re-painting of the entrance heart red and the concentric inner arcs yellow all seem worthwhile . . .
Sometimes,
You find sunken treasure when exploring a water filled Wading Pool Labyrinth.
In this case, a sunken scooter !
Ice water temperatures in the Wading Pool in Christie Pits Park in Toronto.
Appreciate these images as I can see how the colours of the concentric circles of my Wading Pool Labyrinth are doing.
The purples are okay, yet the Red ones, which were closer to Orange when last I re-painted them, really needs refreshing.
More work for me when I’m back in T.O.!
And I’m happy to do it!
Black and White photograph capturing the colourful Lines of the Roxton Road Labyrinth I painted on the wading pool in Fred Hamilton Park, Toronto . . .
Another one of my Wading Pool Labyrinths popping up online . . .
This time it’s the one I painted in the tiny wading pool in Geary Avenue Parkette, at the west end of the park at the foot of Deleware Street North, in Toronto.
Many times, I didn’t paint my name into the Labyrinth, but this is one of those times I did.
The darker green circle aglets are holding their colour, yet the lighter green concentric circles of the Labyrinth could use a new brightening coat of re-painting.
…Added to my ever-expanding to-repaint list for my next trip to Toronto!