Thanks Andrew.
The moth was less than cooperative. I saw it on the window, but by the time I had grabbed the camera and got outside, it had climbed to the top and refused to come down. I balanced on some packing to get the shot, nearly falling through the window in the process. I cloned out a lot of the clutter on the glass, but left some for context. Most if it is actually spider webs. We encourage them because they keep the mozzies down.
On the book, I deliberately exposed the back with its shades of mauve. I treated it mainly as an exercise in selective focus though. I learned a lot. Even at f1.4 the books on either side were in focus, so I carefully arranged the books so that the ones on each side were not visible.
I do wonder how many actually managed to get mauve. It is quite a specific colour, not purple or lavender or pink. but hey, we all know I am a (colour-blind) pedant
As for mayhem, I don't really think it qualifies (I wouldn't vote for it on those grounds). I hope others disagree though
Technically mayhem is an injury to an opponent to prevent him from attacking you. An example would be a sword cut above the eye to effectively blind your adversary. In the colloquial sense it seems to have taken on what should more correctly be called pandemonium (e.g. "there was mayhem on the roads this morning" - maybe journalists can't spell such long words
) An action still seems to be implied though, not just the static chaos of my shed.
On the last one, the vertical line is actually the milk being poured in, and was part of my concept from the start. I did think about a black ground to make it clearer, but I liked the ambiguity delivered in this shot. I do need to think about my backgrounds more though. It is all a learning process.