Thank you for taking the time to say you've been here.
I am sorry to say that I don't publish anonymous comments unless I know you through your initials, first name or blog name. I don't publish comments that have ANY kind of commercial or 'for sale' links.
"When the Amherst sphinx styled herself a pagan, she meant she didn’t believe in the biblical God. What sort of deity, if any, she did believe in is hard to pinpoint." -- Gary Sloan, "Emily Dickinson: Pagan Sphinx,"
I believe that the images and writing posted here fall under the "fair use" section of the U.S. copyright law http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap1.html#107, as they are intended for educational purposes and are not in a medium that is of commercial nature.
Lovely! Makes me want to do some butt squeezing. I can't help myself.
ReplyDeleteThe buns on that Bazille! woot! ;p
ReplyDeleteoooohhhh, lovely! thanks.
ReplyDeleteWow... I am stunned at the beauty.
ReplyDeleteI know...how DOES a fisherman get buns like that anyway? ;-)
ReplyDeletePerhaps his helper could shed some light on that...
ReplyDeleteBut seriously, that first one (the F. Hippolyte) is breath-taking!
ReplyDeleteWonderful art!
ReplyDeleteI like the Bazille best (and not just for the fine buns :-), I think. But that Hypolite IS stunning.
ReplyDelete