Anime small 

754 creative works found

  • A House Fly on its back. This photo won Third Prize in Digital Camera Magazine (UK) Photographer of the Year – Macro category Something to hang in the dining room wall! Nikon D80 with 105mm/2.8 MicroNikkor (first-gen AF, non-D version), Metz 40MZ2 flash and multiple photocopy papers for background, diffuser and reflectors.

  • A Summer landscape in Holland

  • Small clawed Asian otter / / / / Portfolio Areas / Tigers / Wildlife / Macro / Landscape / Birds / Abstracts / Cats~wild and domestic

  • Black-chinned hummingbird nectar feeding. /

  • Praire Dog, can you belive they are endangered? /

  • A female tiger cub named Sally – 10 weeks old. / Best viewed LARGE

  • A burrowing owl / /

  • Jumping Spider (Olympus 510) / The jumping spider family (Salticidae) contains more than 500 described genera and over 5,000 species, making it the largest family of spiders with about 13% of all species (Peng et al., 2002). Jumping spiders have good vision and use it for hunting and navigating. They are capable of jumping from place to place, secured by a silk tether. Both their book lungs and the tracheal system are well-developed, as they depend on both systems (bimodal breathing). Jumping spiders are generally diurnal, active hunters. Their well developed internal hydraulic system extends their limbs by altering the pressure of body fluid (blood) within them. This enables the spiders to jump without having large muscular legs like a grasshopper. The jumping spider can therefore jump 20 to 60 or even 75-80 times the length of their body. When a jumping spider is moving from place to place, and especially just before it jumps, it tethers a filament of silk to whatever it is standing on. Should it fall for one reason or another, it climbs back up the silk tether. Jumping spiders are Scopula bearing spiders, which means that they have a very interesting Tarsal section. And the end of each leg they have hundreds of tiny hairs, which each then split into hundreds more tiny hairs, each tipped with an “end foot”. These thousands of tiny feet allow them to climb up and across virtually any terrain. They can even climb up glass by gripping onto the tiny imperfections, usually an impossible task for any spider. Jumping spiders also use their silk to weave small tent-like dwellings where females can protect their eggs, and which also serve as a shelter while moulting. Jumping spiders are known for their curiosity. If approached by a human hand, instead of scuttling away to safety as most spiders do, the jumping spider will usually leap and turn to face the hand. Further approach may result in the spider jumping backwards while still eyeing the hand. The tiny creature will even raise its forelimbs and “hold its ground”. Because of this contrast to other arachnids, the jumping spider is regarded as inquisitive as it is seemingly interested in whatever approaches it. (Wiki)

  • a cute collection of our small friends

  • Exif Info: / • Place: Lisboa, Portugal / • Date: 02.07.2007 / • Camera: Canon EOS 400D Digital / • Lens: Canon EF-S 17-85mm f/4-5.6 IS USM / • Shutter Speed: 1/80 / • F Number: F/5.6 / • Focal Length: 85 mm / • ISO Speed: 100 For the Canon vs Nikon challenge: New life, new beginning Product Preview: / / / / Featured: / • December 08 – Waterfowl / • March 09 – Urban Wildlife / • April 09 – European Everyday Life / • April 09 – If it Doesn’t Belong / • April 09 – All Countries ~ Wetlands, Ponds, Lakes and Rivers Contests: / • 3rd Place in 1st Contest promoted by Waterfowl / • 6th Place in Perspective promoted by Waterfowl / • 4th Place in April’s Feature Challenge promoted by Stillness Speaks / • 7th Place in My random little animal promoted by If it Doesn’t Belong / • 2nd Place in One Major Blur promoted by Mood & Ambience / • 3rd Place in Delightful Ducks promoted by Pets Are Us / • 9th Place in Your Pet in Water promoted by You’re Accepetd / • 9th Place in New Beginnings promoted by Canon vs Nikon / • 6th Place in Baby Birds promoted by I Love Birds Sold: / • 1 Card to a RB member All artwork is Copyright © Nuno Pires. All rights reserved. My work may not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my written permission. My work does not belong to the public domain.

  • Lion cub up a tree in Serengeti, Tanzania. This is by far my most popular image – just take a look at the features and challenge placements below! Winner of the Cubs challenge in the Big Cats group. Winner of the Close-Up Animal Protrait challenge in the Indigenous to East & Southern Africa group. Finished 6th in the Big Cats December Avatar challenge. Finished 5th in the Exotic Animals It’s All in the Eyes challenge. Finished 8th in the A Whole Lot of Cute challenge of the All Animals Great and Small group. Finished 5th in the Lions challenge of the Fauna, Flora, and Landscapes of South Africa group. Finished 9th in the Animals of Africa! challenge of the All Animals Great and Small group. Featured in Big Cats. Featured in African Arts and Writing. Featured in All Animals Great And Small. Featured in Baby Animals. Featured in Fauna, Flora, and Landscapes of South Africa. Featured on the RedBubble Home Page on 7/13/2009. Also, to its credit: - Over 3000 views. / - Over 50 comments and favorites. / - 2 postcard sales!

  • Barn Owl with wicked expression. Photo based illustration.

  • On Tuesday December 23rd 2008, my son Kevin came home for the Christmas holidays, taking the commuter train from downtown Montreal to our home here on the North Shore. Upon disembarking, he heard loud mewing, followed the source to a snowbank and found this pitiful baby bundle outside in -14 C degrees temperature. Since it was very close to someone’s front door, he knocked, but the woman who answered said she had a dog and was allergic to cats. He tried a few other houses in the vicinity but to no avail and so brought this little lost kitty home to us. Later in the day he canvassed the neighborhood but without any success, no one wanted to claim this little orphan. It is a mystery since this small cat appeared to be about 6 weeks old, had no frozen extremeties, did not appear to be starved and other than being scared and hungry at the time seemed to be in perfect health. / So we have welcomed kitty into our home and named him Frankie after Old Blues himself! This photo was taken a few minutes after my son brought him home. / To see how Frankie is doing now Baby’s Got Blue Eyes Feautred in Kittens, April 2009 / RB popular art January 2009

  • This is Chloe’s delightful Hammy Minnie (she sleeps in the lounge – in her cage of course! at night as she has the tendancy to eat the bars of the cage and generally do whatever it is that Hamsters do – not good when you have to rise at 5.30am though!) so now we get her clonking through our films and programmes but it’s worth it – she and Ollie have come to a recent understanding – he looks at her and she at him! Now just before we retire we pop a little treat in her house – at the moment it’s banana chips! Here she is waiting to see if anything will come out of the camera – I swear she is smiling! Chloe has yet to see this shot so this will be a nice surprise for her I think! I would prefer for the bowls not to be in the shot but to crop them out would mean losing so much of the photo – it’s reality shooting :) Taken with the Canon 400d with the Canon 50mm lens – no flash fired taken in the Tungsten light mode – slightly sharpened and noise removed in Paintshop due to the plastic of the cage! Hope she makes you smile :) Placed 1st in the “Playful Photogenic Pets group challenge / The other Pets Sept 09 / Featured in Pet Rodents 1st June ‘09 / Placed 2nd in the Pets are Us June Avatar Challenge 29th May 09 / Featured in Pets are Us 13th May ‘09* Thank you :))) / Featured in Funny Kritters Feb 14th 09 Thankyou we are all thrilled :))

  • Sold As A Mounted Print Featured in the Canon DSLR group / Featured and Top Tenner in the Giraffes the Long and Short of It group Close Up and Personal Challenge / Featured in the Photography 101 group / Featured in Contrasting Perceptions group 3RD Place in the Baby Animals and their Families challenge in the First Things group Female Giraffe and her calf in captivity / Highly Endangered Shot with Canon 5d

  • Fennec Fox (vulpes zerda) at Africa Alive, Kessingland, Suffolk, England. Any manmade cartoon character couldn’t be any cuter! I was besotted with these critters! ;o) Canon EOS 5D MkII with Canon EF 70-200mm L IS f/4 lens (through double perspex… ugh!)

  • Me and my baby, Daisy. :)

  • Malachite butterfly (lat. Siproeta stelenes)

  • Saw this frog hanging outside the glass of my dinning room window. The grass from the backyard made up the background. Photo By: Jose O. Mediavilla

  • Dancing dog??? / Nikon D60 / Lens: Nikkor 18-200mm / 1/500 f/5.6 ISO320 / as is

  • Vector illustration, environmental care message. / FEATURED IN REDBUBBLE!

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