Bee yellow 

1365 creative works found

  • 3rd installment of kooky rabbit collaboration =P Check out all previous versions here or shortcuts here: 1. Lookout!: Search 2. Lookout!: Mystery 3. Lookout!: Reach 4. Lookout!: Evil Emerges 5. Lookout!: Battlefield 6. Lookout!: Not Over Yet 7. Lookout!: Beyond the Gate 8. Lookout!: Is the battle over? 9. Lookout!: Greetings! Friend or foe 10. Lookout!: Currently peaceful, will it last? 11. Lookout!: Fallen Flight 12. Lookout!: Taken

  • Whippee!!! 5th stage of the pingpong colab with FireRabbit . Check out all previous versions here or shortcuts here: 1. Lookout!: Search 2. Lookout!: Mystery 3. Lookout!: Reach 4. Lookout!: Evil Emerges 5. Lookout!: Battlefield 6. Lookout!: Not Over Yet 7. Lookout!: Beyond the Gate 8. Lookout!: Is the battle over? 9. Lookout!: Greetings! Friend or foe 10. Lookout!: Currently peaceful, will it last? 11. Lookout!: Fallen Flight 12. Lookout!: Taken

  • YAY!! finally finished the 9th installment of LookOut from pingpong. / Now I can pass it on to FireRabbit. Phew. Just a seemingly calm and peacefull scene in this one =) Check out the rest of LookOut series here . or shortcuts here: 1. Lookout!: Search 2. Lookout!: Mystery 3. Lookout!: Reach 4. Lookout!: Evil Emerges 5. Lookout!: Battlefield 6. Lookout!: Not Over Yet 7. Lookout!: Beyond the Gate 8. Lookout!: Is the battle over? 9. Lookout!: Greetings! Friend or foe 10. Lookout!: Currently peaceful, will it last? 11. Lookout!: Fallen Flight 12. Lookout!: Taken

  • This honey bee on my Ceanothus in my back garden was so weighed down by pollen – and yet there always seems to be room for a bit more!

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia A Rainbow Bee-eater. This photo was taken in the Keep River National Park in the north-west corner of the Northern Territory. Canon EOS 300D, Canon100 – 400L IS lens at 400mm – 1/500@ f/9, ISO 200 hand held

  • This little guys was so covered in pollen!

  • WILD & FREE / / We were really lucky to come across these “Little Bee Eaters” whilst on safari in Samburu National Park. They didn’t sit still for long, always moving then flying away, but when they did I was fortunate enough to get this shot. / / (Samburu National Park – Kenya) / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • be like a bee… / :-)

  • Bee captured in mid-flight, flying with his tongue out.

  • Photography, zoom filtered. / By Gina Signore. / Dahlia House Studios. / The Sunflower Patch.

  • Digital art / illustration

  • i liked this idea when it popped up into my head, i kno ANOTHER balloon. but i thought it worked, hope you like my bee girl <3>

  • Just something very simple I did in between my school work, as a bit of a break. I just seem to love simple designs and images a lot. =D / Done in Illustrator. This is the same as Cute Bee Bottom, except the image is on the top part of the shirt here. If you don’t like the placement, you can check out the other one. =)

  • East Greenbush, NY USA / Olympus E510 / The Megachilidae are a cosmopolitan family of (mostly) solitary bees whose pollen-carrying structure (called a scopa) is restricted to the ventral surface of the abdomen (rather than mostly or exclusively on the hind legs as in other bee families). Megachilid genera are most commonly known as mason bees and leafcutter bees, reflecting the materials they build their nest cells from (soil or leaves, respectively); a few collect plant or animal hairs and fibers, and are called carder bees. All species feed on nectar and pollen, but a few are cleptoparasites (informally called “cuckoo bees”), feeding on pollen collected by other megachilid bees. Parasitic species do not possess a scopa. The brightly colored scopa leads to a colloquial name used occasionally in North America – “Jelly-belly bees.” Megachilid bees are among the world’s most efficient pollinators because of their energetic swimming-like motion in the reproductive structures of flowers, which moves pollen, as needed for pollination. Ironically, one of the reasons they are efficient pollinators is their frequency of visits to plants, but this is because they are extremely inefficient at gathering pollen; compared to all other bee families, megachilids require on average nearly ten times as many trips to flowers to gather sufficient resources to provision a single brood cell. / North America has many native megachilid species, but Alfalfa leafcutter bees (Megachile rotundata) are an imported species used for pollination. The most significant native species is Osmia lignaria (the “Orchard Mason Bee” or “Blue Orchard Bee”), which is sold commercially for use in orchard crop pollination, and which can be attracted to nest in wooden blocks with holes drilled in them (which are also sold commercially for this purpose). (wiki) /

  • Self Portrait Originally inspired by a song quote / “do bats eat cats” which related to Alice In Wonderland. It’s a very abstract image… but when I look at it, somehow it does remind me of a darker, more twisted Alice as well as the Cheshire Cat. © Jessica Walker

  • Macro shot

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia / A Rainbow Bee-eater. This photo was taken near Normanton in far north-west Queensland.

  • Was actually taking a picture of the Zucchini Flower and didn’t notice this little chap- well I wouldn’t as it was covered from head to sting in Pollen- having the time of its little life in there!!! Taken with a Fuji A600 Finepix Camera and Used SC and cropped in free download of Picasa 3 Featured in Image Writing – July 2009 / Featured in Plight Of The Bumble Bee- July 2009 / Featured in ‘Extreme Close-Ups – August 2009 / Featured in ‘Alphabet Soup’ – July 2009 / Sale of a Mounted Print to Clive- October 2009 / Sale of a Card – October 2009 / Featured in ‘The World and How We See It’ – November 2009

  • Illustration of an intellectual Bee at a spelling competition.

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