Showing posts with label Sorrento. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sorrento. Show all posts

Monday, January 26, 2009

Wall Mounted

Splash Of Colour Near A Perth Beach

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON

Many flowers remind me of my father. This year makes it a quarter-century since he died, but I suspect that he and his brothers must have grown up in a home with beautiful garden beds.

When my brother and I were children, our Dumayne Avenue home was bordered by a huge L-shaped garden that always had splashes of colour, with cannas, dahlias, sweetpeas and bougainvillea among the many varieties that bloomed in the Calcutta sun.

Every time I see dahlias and bougainvillea, I think of my Dad. I remember, too, how he used to be enchanted by his favourite variety of bougainvillea – the pink-and-white Mary Palmer.


During a long road trip from New Delhi to Dehra Dun in northern India in December 2007, we saw many bungalows with mature bougainvillea providing vivid colour against their walls.

While we were in Western Australia this month, I was (understandably) drawn to this beautiful variety in the back yard of a friend’s beachside Sorrento home.

The blooms were a perfect foil for the muted colours of the exterior walls and even though this wasn’t a Mary Palmer, it would have got my father’s seal of approval.


Visit Luiz Santilli Jr for the home of Today's Flowers.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Light Entertainment

Time To Do Some Shadow Boxing

Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON

We were walking around Sorrento, on the Mornington Peninsula, when I looked up and noticed the striking shadow of the solitary light above the Continental Hotel cafe. This was shot on a little Pentax Optio, a few minutes after we had stepped off the ferry from Queenscliff. It was mid-morning and I was captivated by the simple, old-fashioned lampshade, the whitewashed timber exterior, the brick wall to the left and of course the clear blue sky, so typical of a hot Australian summer day. The light in this country has a very powerful quality, which sort of explains why I always carry a camera. Regular readers of this blog would recall that I never modify or enhance my images in any way. What you see here is what I shoot. And when you live in a county where the colours are so rich in contrast, why would you need to, anyway?