Some new additions to the memorial on the Kelvin Walkway to the Glasgow Sherbet Municipal Works Explosion of 1906. The original plaque (top left) has been there for many years, but the faces of the heroes of day are new.
I know Glasgow has a bit of a reputation when it comes to knife crime, but is Number 5 on this list of forbidden things really needed for the Toddler Play Area in the Gravity trampoline park in Braehead?
Snow certainly seems to bring out the artistic side of Glaswegians, but most of the drawings left in it are a bit more anatomical than this one and so aren't really suitable for posting here!
These missing posters have appeared overnight on the B-Listed Queen Margaret Bridge in the west end of Glasgow after its ornate cast iron Edwardian lamp posts were removed and replaced by modern galvanised steel ones.
As you can see from this picture, Glasgow has quite a history of people putting up unofficial humorous plaques.
The first dates from 2012 and is by Ronnie Heeps, the next two went up sometime in the 2010s (artists unknown), the final one went up this week and is by the Glasgow Information and Kultural Identity Taskforce (GlaIKIT).
A bit of fun for the end of today. If you've even been in Finnieston area of Glasgow and seen this monkey hanging from a wire on Minerva Street and wondered what it's doing there, the Glasgow Information and Kultural Identity Taskforce (or Glaikit for short) have an explanation for you which they've kindly put on a plaque nearby.