This is a non-static collage: click to glide through images.
Discontent at the tram stop
Bike storage
Balloon in a rubbish bin
Miniature house at the Nożyk Synagogue: no labels
Vase at the synagogue
Ready for planting
Puddle
Decorations and reflections at Unii Lubelskiej
Decorations at Rakowieczka
Decorative balustrade at Nożyk Synagogue
Outside a sex shop: it makes me laugh every time I see it
Mural on the back of the clothes shop next door
Guardian dragon outside a Chinese restaurant
Decorative feature of building near Fotoplastikon
Car parked in front of Stalin’s Gift
Stalin’s Gift – again!
Selling New Year stuff where Christmas trees were sold last week
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About morselsandscraps
A retired Australian who spends a lot of time in Warsaw, and blogs as a way of life.
Your miscellanea is always a surprise, the sex shop wins this time, very subtle!
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I’d have said coy, and 1950s!
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Love this very eclectic miscellanea….. I agree with Gilly, the sex shop wins , I would be laughing too! Also enjoyed the bike storage and the miniature house at Nozyk synagogue….
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I think I liked the egg-balloon in the rubbish bin!
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😀
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I’m also laughing at the sex-store mural — all those wiggly toes! As for the car outside Stalin’s Gift (and what a name — is it some kind of vintage retail shop?), I doubt Stalin would have been the least bit amused. Not very heroic Soviet Realism, is it!
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The car’s certainly not Soviet realism. Stalin’s Gift aka the Palace of Science and Culture, now home to museums, theatre, cinemas, and a contingent of cats to keep the rats under control, is a monster of a building that was in fact a “gift” from Stalin to mollify the Poles when Russia took over Poland after WW2. It’s the building lurking behind trees in this collage: usually it dominates the cityscape. I’m glad I finally got round to photographing the window of the sex store! And that people are as amused as I am.
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A city is never boring. So many things to catch one’s eye. And so many ways to interpret what you see. I like roaming around a city, but I could never live in one now. I do appreciate your photographic compositions.
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Thank you. Back to rural life will be a bit of a shock I think – although there’s inexhaustible plenty to notice there too.
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Yay! A rolling gallery 🙂 🙂 It wouldn’t let me in to comment but that’s more my incompetence on the new laptop I think.
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I could’ve been doing rolling galleries all along, but I got a bit hooked on static ones.
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What a great variety of images! I laughed as well at the sweatshop image.
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