
A contribution for Cee’s Black & White Challenge – this would be my pick this week.
tobias m. schiel

A contribution for Cee’s Black & White Challenge – this would be my pick this week.

“Music is your own experience, your thoughts, your wisdom. If you don’t live it, it won’t come out of your horn.” Charlie Parker

As I go through my pictures of miniature scenes, I find one commen denominator: urban environments. I obviously find myself drawn to urban settings, to the world of alleys, bars, theaters, and public transportatiou. Here’s a retrospective celebrating the city and its lights (and shadows) in H0 scale.




While the vehicles and figures (and the phone booth) come from the toy store, the buildings are custom made, mostly from scratch.


Looking for pictures from a different series, I happened upon these – and remembered the last Lens Artists’ Photo Challenge: Planes, Trains, and Automobiles … and the places they take us. (The sign in the bottom picture reads ‘keep clear’.)



The Alster Fleet in Hamburg – these boats are waiting to take tourists around on the river Alster, as I was surprised to find out when we visited a couple of years ago. Because I remember that when I was a boy, we used to hop on these boats to get from A to B, with this very fleet servicing the waterways like any other public transportation. For us kids, it was great fun to take the boat when we went visiting relatives.
However, since this week’s Lens Artists’ Challenge specifically asked for Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, here’s a picture with autos…








Architecture, art and audience: These three connect in museums, and I always find that facinating. Great architecture seems to open our minds for art, and art always seems to remind us of the vast range of possibilities we have. So, whenever I walk through a museum, there’ll be some favourite finds!



…and while the sun is about to set on these Dutch shores, this is my contribution for this week’s Lens-Artists’s challenge: Here comes the sun.



The picture above, named after a song by Vernon Duke, is part of my Jazz series. I asked myself if the situation was too surreal, but then I saw the Lens Artists’ challenge, which is Surrealism. And I decided this amount of surrealism was all right. After all, the fun of working with toys is that you can push everything towards Surrealism as much as you like.
Continue reading “April in Paris”
Music by Duke Ellington. This is the first in a series of Jazz pictures I have not yet quite finished. It is also an entry for Paula’s “Pick A Word in July” in which I have not participated in ages: Here’s a window.

A contribution to the lens-artists’ photo challenge Seeing Double.












