A different perspective on my most recent Labyrinth.
My choice of red-pink-orange-beige paints feels right.
Grateful I skipped using blue, green, and other darker colours.
A different perspective on my most recent Labyrinth.
My choice of red-pink-orange-beige paints feels right.
Grateful I skipped using blue, green, and other darker colours.
“With everything shut down the boardwalk was busy.
Plus,
It seemed like a good day to finally walk the Labyrinth.”
The opening frames of this drone video reveal a visual taste of my most recent, and most complex, 22 Lane Octagon Labyrinth in Budapest Park, Sunnyside Boardwalk, Toronto . . .
My latest Labyrinth,
Perspective from west side of my eight sided 22 Lane Octagon Labyrinth design . . .
My most recent Labyrinth . . .
“Today I found the Labyrinth to my heart and soul during an urban hike with my hiking group.
So much so, I ditched them and did my own thing half way through.
☀️
It was sunny. The lake was glistening.
The light breeze was perfect.
The wildlife were everywhere.
🧘♂️
This Labyrinth has plenty of twists and turns.
There was a couple of times when I wanted to throw the towel in and take the short cut – to get right to it.
🏃♀️
But I stuck with it.
👉
Because deep down I know if I skip the necessary steps in life, I’ll miss certain intended life lessons.
Then instead of growing and evolving, I’m just bypassing the real stuff.
The stuff that makes life interesting and challenging!
🙌”
Two of the original four Labyrinths I painted to create Labyrinth Pier have weathered yet remain visible enough to walk . . .
Today I went for a walk in my neighbourhood and ran into @LabyrinthsDOTca painting his newest labyrinth. I learned that this is a very rare evenly numbered (22 row) labyrinth design in Toronto's oldest wading pool. You never know what serendipity awaits in every stroll! pic.twitter.com/B1cFVl7FWO
— Jess Brodeur (@jessicaannebro) October 20, 2019
Power Line shadows transect my Labyrinths’ painted Lines . . .
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 . . .
The colours are faded, yet still comfortably visible enough to walk the Labyrinth Steve & I painted in the Wading Pool in Eglinton Park, midtown Toronto . . .
“Children never walk a Labyrinth, Children always Run…”
And sometimes they use a scooter !
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 . . .
Thumbs Up for the Blue Heart painted in the Centre of my Labyrinth located in the middle of Grange Park, Downtown Toronto . . .