![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi5SWEH_vZPZV2hU-kJvjP3bORcGTymkCHTpdJ05iAVF1zxh6MjF6p40NelmW5K9HFYSEKhWkzyCGhgCkAehcqG1wS9tuS-x27OjtgFC4YIrqyx6SolC4tnB2F-v2q7e9W2zLyy-eqIy5Q/s200/red+light.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiiTVwsXuNnxUK6Au-z0BRSILtHstcfKzH80X2mbuQv4YHetJRt377l4i_uiIR7Q1vY7Jgo_STxdakN6Jtfa9IZLKA_jDAZhUY0r2GObItKABOQ4Suf4wzvGNkqHyUxFMdq7E2WTUMyjjM/s200/green+light.jpg)
"The red light contains some orange in its hue, and the green light contains some blue, to provide some support for people with red-green color blindness." (Wiki) The whiteness of the snow wrapped around the lights brought that out for me.
An exploration of where crinoids, oil and arts meet
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