(a) Little mirror
(b) Chirstmas ornament
(c) Taxidermy crow
(d) Figurine
(e) Mustard egg
(f) Slinky
(g) Bigger mirror
(h) House number
(i) House number
  1. (1)      (decoration) A decorative object is any item that adorns, enriches or beautifies; something added for the purpose of embellishment or ornamentation. Do you remember when stickers were a thing in highschool, and you would trade them and stick them to homework folders and notebooks?
          I spend approximately 5 hours a day looking at my computer screen. I have been told that keeping your eyes focused on something as close to you as a laptop screen weakens your eyes. Apparently, it makes you short-sighted. I do try to remember shifting my focus to behind my screen from time to time but must admit it seldomly ever happens. Which means: IRL decoration remains hidden behind my screen most of the time anyways.
  2. (2)       (tabs) I am the kind of person to have a million tabs opened simultaneously. Trying not to get lost, I often switch between them furiously when looking for a specific link I had opened at some point. Favicon by favicon they pile up alongside each other, waiting for me to sort them, save them or close them.
          Some tabs survive longer than others, and a few remain open for months at a time. These lucky ones usually imply a twofold relation: While they are a constant reminder of my indecisiveness to either close or archive them they do become a place of familiarity when I open the browser.
  3. (3)       (favicons) A favicon, also known as a shortcut icon, website icon, tab icon, URL icon, or bookmark icon, is a file containing one or more small icons associated with a particular website or web page. Browsers that provide favicon support typically display a page's favicon in the browser's address bar (sometimes in the history as well) and next to the page's name in a list of bookmarks. Browsers that support a tabbed document interface typically show a page's favicon next to the page's title on the tab.
          Most commonly, a favicon is supposed to give you guidance. It tries to stand out, to be remarkable – little billboards compressed into a maximum of 64x64px. Small corporate logos staring back at you from the corner of your eyes. I do wonder if they can be something else; if they can be freed from their utilitarian function.

  4. (4)        (periphery) Peripheral vision, or indirect vision, is vision as it occurs outside the point of fixation, i.e. away from the center of gaze or, when viewed at large angles, in (or out of) the "corner of one's eye". Its main functions are the recognition of well-known structures and forms with no need to focus, the identification of similar forms and movements and the delivery of sensations for the background of detailed visual perception. The actual pheriphery area can be conceived as bounded at the center by a circle 60° in radius or 120° in diameter, centered around the fixation point. I didn't do the math but after reading informative charts on pheripheric vision, I am pretty sure that the tab bar of the browser is a prime peripheric spot.