A Spot of Color on a Gray Day.

It's that time of year when the weather is sometimes cold and sometimes mild, sometimes snowing and sometimes melting.  Sometimes slushy and sometimes icy.  Mostly gray sky, sometimes sunny, but mostly gray.

                                Then I got a picture from my son-in-law.


And it brightened my day, just like that.

My daughter crotched this rainbow rug.  She was inspired by one she saw on Pinterest and one of her friends made one.  She recycled t-shirts, cut them in strips, and used a regular crotchet hook.

I found a user friendly tutorial to crochet a rug HERE.


This photo makes me smile every time.  

My grand-daughter loves these Mardi Gras necklaces.  I bought her four or five one time when I was visiting.  They kept her occupied while her Mama was doing some shopping.  Then they found some more at a garage sale.  Lots of fun and learning for very little cost.


Need to brighten your gray day?  Here are some fun facts about Rainbows.

rainbow can be defined as a band of colors (from red on the inside to violet on the outside) assembled as an arc that is formed by reflection and refraction (or bending) of the sun's rays inside raindrops. They appear when it is raining in one part of the sky and sunny in another.

Some Interesting Facts about Rainbows
When you see a rainbow...
it is after rain. The sun is always behind you and the rain in front of you when a rainbow appears, so the center of the rainbow's arc is directly opposite the sun.
Most people think...
the only colors of a rainbow are red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, and violet, but a rainbow is actually made up of an entire continuum of colors—even colors the eye can't see!
We are able to see the colors of a rainbow because...
light of different colors is refracted when it travels from one medium, such as air, and into another- -in this case, the water of the raindrops. When all the colors that make up sunlight are combined, they look white, but once they are refracted, the colors break up into the ones we see in a rainbow.
Every person...
sees their own "personal" rainbow. When you look at one, you are seeing the light bounced off of certain raindrops, but when the person standing next to you looks at the same rainbow, they may see the light reflecting off other raindrops from a completely different angle. In addition, everyone sees colors differently according to light and how their eyes interpret it.
You can never...
actually reach the end of a rainbow, where a pot of gold supposedly awaits. As you move, the rainbow that your eyes see moves as well, because the raindrops are at different spots in the atmosphere. The rainbow, then, will always "move away" at the same rate that you are moving.

credit to the Franklin Institute...


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