That protects the inhabitants of LJUBLJANA, Slovenia
This rutabaga is a really rude dude! / Try him on and he’ll accent your mood! / CREATION INFORMATION Medium: Vector Art, Cartoon, Digital Art, T-Shirt Design. Tools: Photoshop CS2. / CONTEST & CHALLENGE HISTORY 04/05/08 – Entry to Two Word Challenge’s Challenge 15 – Rutabaga and Distrust / ALSO AVAILABLE / Rude-a-Baga’s Eat Me! Cards & Wall Art Rude-a-Baga’s I am Yummier! T-Shirts and Cards & Wall Art /
This rutabaga is a really rude dude! / Try him on and he’ll accent your mood! / CREATION INFORMATION Medium: Vector Art, Cartoon, Digital Art, T-Shirt Design. Tools: Photoshop CS2. / ALSO AVAILABLE / Rude-a-Baga’s I am Yummier! Cards & Wall Art / Rude-a-Baga’s Eat Me! T-Shirts and Cards & Wall Art /
Pen and ink watercolor of a “Rag Doll” this is a large peice and I will work on getting the whole peice for you. There is a monster coming soon about to eat the rag doll.
A commission through my Guild on Domo Online (Dream of Mirror Online). This is based off of several Love Egg Pets found in the game :D Enjoy ^^
A remake of one of my earliest characters. This card is by far my favorite due to the fact that I used some really sparkley gel pens for it. It’s just too cool to have the whole card glimmer against the light, hehe. ACEO stands for Art Cards, Editions and Originals. ACEOs are affordable and collectible pieces of art. / This is an original ACEO made by me. Medium: Acid Free Paper, Colored Pencils, Pen / Subject: The Mistress of Darkness Shows off for her Minions… The actual card is still in stock and can be purchased here
‘Ilio holo i kauaua ~ Hawaiian Translation: Dog That Runs in Rough Water / Hawaiian Monk Seal © 2009 Sharon Anne Mau Marine Conservation Biology Institute A beautiful sleeping Hawaiian Monk Seal basking in the sun on Ho’okipa / Maui Hawai’i Monachus schauinslandi / Pinniped Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi / 22.April 2008 1:16:10 PM / Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/320 / Av( Aperture Value ) 9.0 / ISO Speed 400 “An adult monk seal is usually dark grey or brown with a light grey or yellow belly. Adults can be up to 7 feet and weigh anywhere from 396 to 595 pounds; adult females are generally larger than males. Pups usually weigh 24 to 33 pounds at birth and weigh up to 132 to 198 pounds within five to six weeks. The monk seal’s common name is derived from its folds of skin that look like a monk’s hood, and because it spends most of its time alone or in very small groups. Most Hawaiian Monk Seals live in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands – Kure Atoll, Midway Atoll, Pearl and Hermes Reef, Lisianski Island, Laysan Island, French Frigate Shoals, Gardner Pinnacles, Necker Island, and Nihoa Island. These atolls and islands are very remote and are either uninhabited or have little impact by humans, thus providing an ideal habitat for these easily disturbed creatures. The coral reefs found around these atolls and islands provide the monk seal with its food supply: spiny lobsters, octopuses, eels, and various reef fishes. Their enemies include humans, sharks, diseases, attacks from their own species, and marine debris such as lost fishing nets and plastic products. They spend most of their time in the ocean but like to rest on sandy beaches, and sometimes use beach vegetation as shelter from wind and rain. Monk seals are expert swimmers and divers; one seal was recorded diving into depths in the range of 66 and 96 fathoms (396 to 576 feet). The average monk seal dives 51.2 times per day. The life span of the Hawaiian Monk Seal is from 25-30 years. The Hawaiian Monk Seal recovery efforts are overseen by the National Marine Fisheries Service, in cooperation with other government and private organizations and universities. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages many remote islands as National Wildlife Refuges to protect their habitat. The Hawaiian Monk Seal was listed as an endangered species in 1976 under the Federal Endangered Species Act. Critical habitat was designated in 1988 from beaches to a depth of 20 fathoms (120 feet) around the northwestern Hawaiian islands.” Save Our Seals Hawaiian Monk Seal Information Source This photograph cannot be modified for commercial or advertising use, nor can it be copied or reproduced in any form without the photographer’s permission. I own full and exclusive copyrights on all my photographs and they are protected under International Copyright laws. My images do not belong to the public domain and may not be posted in another webpage on the internet or intranet, published in any book, magazine, newsletter or newspaper, duplicated, used in a dirivative work of art, used as illustration for musical, dramatic, and/or literary works, or used for commercial use of any kind whatsoever without my express written authorization, including but not limited to resale of my images without a license for use. © 2009 Fine Art Photography, Research and Photojournalism by Sharon Anne Mau
Multicoloured Fine Art Graphic Digital | Vector Art | Art Print Edition | Available – Price On Application | © Bernd Wachtmeister, 2008
Multicoloured Fine Art Graphic Digital | Vector Art | Art Print Edition | Available – Price On Application | © Bernd Wachtmeister, 2008
“Sunbird” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © I am blessed to enjoy the visits of a friendly little sunbird / that flutters up against my kitchen window early in the / mornings. Flies and gnats that have gathered there are / quickly devoured giving him strength for the coming day. / Tiny wings beat so fast they appear to be just a blur of / movement through the windows glass pane. / He suddenly disappears….. just as quickly as he / appeared, he departs, onto his next serving of breakfast. / I was lucky enough to capture this little fellow in a friend’s / garden. Although not ‘my’ wee sunbird, he was just as / charming and very considerate to sit still long enough / for me to get this shot. “If I keep a green bough in my heart, / the singing bird will come.” / ~ Chinese Proverb
Multicoloured Fine Art Graphic Digital – Vector Art – Design And Copyright By Bernd Wachtmeister, 2008 Art Print Available| Print Size: 59×84 cm | Price On Application
“Winds of a Blue Moon” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © A mother wallaby stands before a full blue moon, framed by a windswept hillside of native grasses and a stormy night sky. “Blue moon / You know just what I was there for / You heard me saying a prayer for / Someone I really could care for.” “Blue Moon / Now I’m no longer alone / Without a dream in my heart / Without a love of my own.” / ~ Lorenz Hart
“Walkabout” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © Two curious emus walking through the Australian outback searching for food before suddenly eye balling the strange looking photographer. ;) “Old Man Emu / He can’t fly but I’m telling you…. / He can run the pants off a kangaroo!” / ~ John Williamson
“Dinner Time” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © Out in our boat, we spotted something floating in / the water about half way across a 2km wide river…. / it turned out to be our little friend here, the echidna. He kindly let me photograph him before we took him to the bank / where he meandered quietly back into the scrub. “Why don’t echidnas get sick?” “Because they are full of ‘antibodies”. Competition: Top Ten of the Woman Photographer group challenge – Oddly Fantastic.
“Froggy Heaven” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © One of Australia’s largest frogs (a White Lipped Tree frog) resting on a rock amongst reeds beside a golden pond, looking at his next feed of fly sitting on his nose while seemingly immune to the swarms of flies and mosquitoes buzzing around him. “Why are frogs so happy?” “They eat whatever bugs them.”
“Eggs for Breakfast” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © A Mertens’ Water Monitor (Varanus mertensi) enjoys a delicious meal of egg using his long tongue to devour its contents.
This is the little guy I was feeding at the front of my dads place in BC.
A cuttlefish gazes out of the glass tank at the New England Aquarium in Boston Massachusetts.
RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.
On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.
It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.
Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 333,600 items to more than 70 countries around the world.
Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.