@pf100 simply fantastic job dude I swear to you that I know this amazing desktop from somewhere CONGRATS
Ditto, I used to spent hours looking for a nice wallpaper, but why? I see it only for a few secs a day at startup. All the time I could have spent aimlessly browsing the internet. I do not use Start at all, so I do not care about it.
I explained twice that it's part of my Desktop - the interesting part. Is it so hard to understand? lol
i do have a load of landscape wallpapers i sometimes use, but i always go back to xp prairie wind bitmap(tiled) as it is easy on the eye. which w10 themes are not. being able to change the white background would help a lot.
https://forums.mydigitallife.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=41418&d=1484964084&thumb=1&stc=1 https://forums.mydigitallife.net/attachment.php?attachmentid=41419&d=1484964092&thumb=1&stc=1
Mine is hooded too and has a shadow. and its knife is dripping. Yours doesn't have any of the extra features. It's a stripped down light version. EDIT: Here's the avatar you should be using to also match your Windows 10.
I'm just having fun. No offense intended. But I really can't see a ghost with a knife. Can you load that wallpaper in an image editor and show just the ghost full size??
I saw the thread and thought of the exact same thing. You beat me to the punch with 1.3! Guess I could drop 2.x Wait, I got it:
We're all having fun, no offense taken or intended. But honestly, I can't understand how people fail to see the prominent hooded ghost holding a dripping knife. I've even isolated it in the avatar I posted, apparently to no avail. But since you come back, I take your word that, like actual ghosts, it doesn’t manifest itself everybody. So I’ve painted it red, in the hope that it “materializes”. In my case, it’s the ghost of my previous beloved XP, which I abandoned for W10, haunting me. Is it possible that it only manifests itself to me?
I see it now. The way you described it as being in the bottom right corner made me look around the rocks on the bottom right. It would be better described as "the shape of the snow on the hill on the right."