Take a close look.
Write a poetic description.
Take some chances using using figurative language devices such as metaphors, similes, personification, alliteration and onomatopoeia. Have fun seeing things in new ways, using surprising comparisons.
"The difficult is what takes a little time; the impossible is what takes a little longer," said Fridjof Nansen, the 1922 Nobel Peace Prize winner who personally organized the repatriation of more than four hundred thousand prisoners of war after World War I and helped save millions of Russians from starvation.
Armoured trucks trudging through bleak threaded landscapes.
ReplyDelete#1 microscopic dimonds tumbling to their doom
ReplyDelete#2 the dark shadowy figures glided through the unwritten future
What is the 1st picture of?
ReplyDeleteI really do not know what it is but what I got from it was
ReplyDeletethe crystalls form in a band crossing gaps that were as dull as ever
The first photograph is of magnified sugar crystals and the second photograph is of magnified dust mites.
ReplyDeleteYou are correct on both counts! Now how about some descriptions.
ReplyDeleteThe shards of jagged glass trip over each other in their frantic race to touch the Earth.
ReplyDeletethe third one to me looks like an explosion of colors radiating across the screen
ReplyDeleteIt looks like pure, amazing nature in micro form
ReplyDelete#3 The pure crisp swaying fingers linked and formed a magical swirling bond of connection as they blended and formed one powerful monster.
ReplyDelete#1 Chunks of unknown ice tumbled clashing and chilling down the mountain of misty terror.