Mere colour, unspoiled by meaning, and unallied with definite form, can speak to the soul in a thousand different ways
Oscar Wilde
In photography the word ‘monochrome’ is usually used to describe black and white images. But it doesn’t have to be.
Way back in November 2020, just a few months into my blogging journey, I wrote a post titled ‘Monochrome in colour’. In it I argued that the word ‘monochrome’ should not be synonymous with ‘black and white’. In it I wrote:
Although all black and white photos are monochrome photos, not all monochrome photos have to be black and white. Monochrome comes from the Greek monochromos meaning ‘having one colour’. But why shouldn’t that one colour be green, beige, or orange? Or for that matter, grey, red or blue?
Using shades of just one colour can create striking pictures that really capture the mood of a place. Such images can be restful on the eye or can really pack a punch, depending on the colour involved. Care needs to be taken, however, to ensure that the composition is sufficiently interesting; we are aiming for monochrome, not monotony!
Margaret must have been thinking along the same lines, as for this week’s Monochrome Madness she proposes that we ‘explore those shots which, by accident, design, or clever editing, are monochrome in any colour but black and white’.
As I have posted on this topic not once but twice previously (the second post was in September 2023), for this post I have chosen to focus on photos from my most recent trip to Sicily and Malta. I hope they meet the brief and also back up my assertion that ‘monochrome’ is not the same as ‘black and white’.
My feature photo was taken looking down from the Piazza IX Aprile Belvedere in Taormina, Sicily.

Door in Sliema, Malta

Another detail from the same door in Sliema
At the B&B La Saline, Sicily


At the Villa Laura, Sicily

View of Etna from the Villa Laura, Sicily

Barn door, Sicily
Door in Mdina, Malta


Church of the Assumption, Mġarr, Malta
Window in Noto, Sicily


The Maltese coat of arms on a building in Valetta, Malta

At the Palazzo Violetta, Sliema, Malta

Sleeping cat at the Villa Laura, Sicily

Door in Ortigia, Syracuse, Sicily
Fishing nets in Marsaxlokk, Malta


Rose after rain at the Villa Laura, Sicily
33 Comments
Annie Berger
I hadn’t thought of monochrome in this way before, so thank you for opening my eyes to a different way of looking at things, Sarah. As our youngest granddaughter is named Violet, you know my favorite has to be the photo you took at Palazzo Violetta.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Annie 😊 What a pretty name for your granddaughter! I’m glad to have introduced you to this fresh way of looking at monochrome.
Leanne Cole
Great set of photos Sarah and I liked what you said at the start, and your photos are different to mine. I really the Etna from the Villa Laura, Sicily image.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Leanne 😊 We have very different styles of photography / editing, but that’s what makes it so interesting to share and see what each other has done for these challenges!
Amy
Beautiful set of photos of one color, Sarah! Love those blue door especially. 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Amy – I loved that door, it had several interesting details as well as being a beautiful colour!
Egídio
How wonderful it is to see monochrome photos such as these! Beautiful!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Egidio 😊
Pepper
Lovely monochromes.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much 😊
thesimlux
Sleeping cat and fishing nets…there’s a story between the two! 🐟🐈💤
Sarah Wilkie
Haha, thank you for that thought 😆
margaret21
Sarah, these are wonderful! Text book monochrome-in-colour. The door furniture is great. Well … they all are!
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Margaret 😊 I loved your choice of theme this week!
margaret21
Thanks Sarah. It’s a challenge, thinking of a challenge, isn’t it? Your next two sound great to me.
Sarah Wilkie
🙂😘
Monkey's Tale
Love all the doorknockers, especially the one from Ortigia. Maggie
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Maggie – I thought that one was rather fun 😀
grandmisadventures
Beautiful monochrome pictures- the blue door is favorite, closely followed by the red rose 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Meg, I’m glad you liked them 🙂
Heyjude
Much as I like the close-ups of the door details I kind of think that it is too easy to create a monochrome photo by zooming in, so the view of the sea, Mount Etna (my favourite) and the cat are my preferences.
Sarah Wilkie
I’m inclined to agree with you Jude – a painted door in particular is a bit of a copout! I’m glad you like the sea and the cat as they are favourites of mine 🙂
Heyjude
I rather liked the ones on your previous post.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you – also for taking the time to check it out 😊
wetanddustyroads
It’s nice to see monochrome in colour! My favourite is the window in Sicily and the colourful chaos of fishing nets in Marsaxlokk.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much, I’m so glad you enjoyed these 😀
Easymalc
Another interesting selection Sarah, but one day I’d like you to do a post on cataloguing images. How do you manage to find so many to fit a criteria when they’re spread over so many different categories? Not just by tagging them surely 🤗
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Malcolm 🙂 I use Bridge, which is free (I think?) Adobe software. Although these ones were easy as it was such a recent trip and being a shorter one there were relatively few photos, so I just browsed through my folders!
Easymalc
Ah! So that’s the secret. I wasn’t familiar with that app, and although I probably won’t ever need to use it, at least I know where to go should I ever need to.
Alli Templeton
Another fab collection, Sarah, and good to see the word ‘monochrome’ being taken literally. All excellent shots, as always. Mount Etna looks both mysterious and majestic in it’s cloak of snow, and I love the doors, with the theme particularly well represented in the Mdina and Sicily wooden doors with their unpainted (presumably iron?) furniture. Different materials, but still shades of the same colour. And, of course, the snoozing cat is gorgeous! 🙂
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Alli 😊 Yes, I’m sure that door furniture is iron, and rather rusty in places, but not enough to spoil the ‘monochrome’ effect! Glad you like the cat, I was rather pleased with that shot 😀
Sue
Brilliant! That view of Etna, and some of those doors do it for me
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Sue 😊