Blue native 

673 creative works found

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Rainbow Lorikeet.

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Black-backed Magpie in a typical pose when calling.

  • Splendid fairy wren – malurus splendens / Breeding Male – mostly dark blue , narrow black band on upper breast extending to black collar on neck . / Non breeding male – wings partly and tail wholly dull blue; rest of upper parts greyish brown ; under parts whitish. / Female – tail dull blue ; rest of body greyish brown with whitish under parts For more images of cozmist: / Busselton Jetty Images / Christmas Cards / Dogs / Birds / Scenery / Creatures

  • Acrylic & Texture Paste. Painted by Ciska Oct 2007 Sold original / 35.5CM X 45.5CM

  • the Rainbow Lorikeet is unmistakable with its bright red beak and colourful /

  • This is a great Blue Heron done in haida/coast salish style and is often called the watcher by Coast Salish tribes. Before the European contact in the Pacific Northwest coast wars were waged between many of the different tribes so there was always the threat of a village being raided. Most Coast Salish villages are located at a mouth of a salmon bearing river which also happens to be a habitat for blue herons so villages would have these birds located outside in the water. The herons would act as an alarm system and start flying and squawking if a war canoe or anything else was approaching the village. I decided to draw this because the other day I witnessed this happened while I was collecting water samples of the river for my work and as soon as the heron seen me it turned around flew the opposite way and warned all the other animals that a human was approaching the river. My tribe T’Sou-ke have a song to honor this bird for thier help in the protection of our villages over the many years.

  • This is a great Blue Heron done in haida/coast salish style and is often called the watcher by Coast Salish tribes. Before the European contact in the Pacific Northwest coast wars were waged between many of the different tribes so there was always the threat of a village being raided. Most Coast Salish villages are located at a mouth of a salmon bearing river which also happens to be a habitat for blue herons so villages would have these birds located outside in the water. The herons would act as an alarm system and start flying and squawking if a war canoe or anything else was approaching the village. I decided to draw this because the other day I witnessed this happened while I was collecting water samples of the river for my work and as soon as the heron seen me it turned around flew the opposite way and warned all the other animals that a human was approaching the river.

  • Best viewed LARGE Gorgeous eucalyptus leaves fallen to the ground – photographed exactly as I found them.

  • ‘Beach Series’ card by Karin Taylor Aloha Blue is a mixed media production (ink, pastel, charcoal, acrylic) on canvas textured paper. A lovely hula girl with curves in all the right places and a funky dreadlock ‘do’

  • Watercolor Edited in photoshop#2 in the series I am there when you least expect, / knowing I will be there is the reality. / /

  • Best Viewed Large All Rights Reserved / @ Julia Wright / Featured in Mandala group / Featured in Creative Spirits of Queensland / Featured in Creative Cards I’ve seen many moons through these wrinkled eyes / The years have made me old but they’ve made me wise / Now the white man lives where our rivers run For now better days have passed / We walk the streets of broken glass / Our people vanished as snow before the summer sun / Like dogs we were driven from this place / Such injustice, time will not erase / All these changes cannot be undone When you feel the anger inside of you / Hold your head high – let your aim be true / Though your heart beats like a drum / My native son Once there was a time my little one / Before the wagons – before the soldiers’ guns / When this land was ours as far as the eagle flies No white flag – no broken truce / With few words one can speak the truth – I don’t hear it / Time won’t heal it now With each new day that comes to pass / Will the great spirit free us all at last? / He said we were the chosen ones For all we had there’s nothin’ left / We won’t forgive – we can’t forget / You know that your day will come / My native son With each new day that comes to pass / Will the great spirit free us all at last? / What has happened can never be undone When I was young – not yet a man / The sun rose and set upon our land / We were the chosen ones / My native son Lyric’s by Bryan Adams

  • “Blue Duck”...is an original Pastel, Prismacolor Pencil, Pen and Ink drawing. / Drawn on smooth, bonded, no tooth, acid free artist paper. My studio is located in Mesquite, Nevada. I teach private classes, work on commissioned work and create and add to my own collection. / Thank your for viewing my art. VIEW mygallery / VIEW susan’szazzle / /

  • 10×14 watercolor enhanced colored pencil. Original unavailable. Photographic reference from “Macky”. The Black-shouldered Kite (Elanus axillaris) is a small raptor found in open habitat throughout Australia. Like all the elanid kites, it is a specialist predator of rodents. / The name “Black-shouldered Kite” was formerly used for a European and African species, Elanus caeruleus, and the Australian bird (and also a North American species, the White-tailed Kite Elanus leucurus) were treated as subspecies of this. However the three species are now regarded as distinct, and the name Black-winged Kite is used for E. caeruleus. Modern references to the Black-shouldered Kite should therefore unambiguously mean the Australian species. / Black-Shouldered Kites are around 35 to 38 cm in length and have a wingspan of between 80 and 95 cm. Adults are a very pale grey with a white head and white underparts. The leading edge of the inner wing is black. When perched, this gives them their prominent black “shoulders”. / Although reported from almost all parts of Australia, they are most common in the relatively fertile south-east and south-west corners of the mainland, and in south-east Queensland.They are also common throughout Southern Africa. They are rare in the deep desert and appear to be only accidental visitors to northern Tasmania and the Torres Strait islands. Although found in timbered country, they are mainly birds of the grasslands. European occupation of Australia has, on the whole, benefited them by clearing vast expanses of forest for agriculture and providing suitable conditions for much larger numbers of mice. (information from Wikipedia) Complete 2008

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Telopea speciosissima Telopea speciosissima (meaning “very handsome”) – Also known as the “Waratah” is the floral emblem of New South Wales and is one of Australia’s best known and most spectacular native plants. It occurs in a semi-circle around Sydney extending from around Ulladulla in the south to Lake Macquarie in the north and west to the higher parts of the Blue Mountains, New South Wales. The family Proteaceae is a very ancient, widespread family occurring in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, South America and eastern Asia. It contains about 75 genera of which 44 are endemic to Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS / 12.1MP – 6x Optical Zoom – 4x Digital Zoom

  • Done in Apophysis / Music Markings on the walls / telling tales big and small. / Leaving clues for us / to know,how the old ones / lived ,their stories told. link

  • Done in Apophsis and then edited in Photoshop to creat lighting effects. This is a series I have been working on I will add the others if someone wants one. Music

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Crimson Rosella feeding in a Christmas Bush. / Photo taken at Loftus, NSW, Australia

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia *Royal Spoonbill *. Photo taken in the Myall Lakes National Park, NSW, Australia.

  • For Totem cards, wolves are on the endangered list. / Dawn’s website / Pastels and photoshop / zazzle / / /

  • Design inspired by Native American artwork.

  • It is said, in the old days Bear Warriors, through a special relationship with bear spirits, literally adopted a bear’s strength in the rage of battle, actually transforming into bears while they fought. / The Sioux had an elite medicine society composed of persons who got their supernatural powers from ‘mato ihan blapi’ meaning “those who dream of bears.” The Bear medicine men teach each other the songs and ceremonies and the medicines they must use and what they are good for. For Native people, the Bear Warrior was the epitome of bravery and courage. The mark of the bear’s claw on the shield or the horse of a warrior was one to be feared, and yet respected. Bear Medicine is also associated with the ability to heal. Bear Medicine is known in virtually all cultures within the bear’s range. The bear is known in many cultures as a great healer, since it seeks out plants for its own healing. North American brown bears and Kodiak bears are known to dig up Ligusticum porteri(also known as “Bear Root”) and chew on it and then rub it on their fur. The plant is known to have antibiotic properties, be good for stomachaches, and repels insects. Alaskan brown bears are known to chew on sedge to rid themselves of tapeworm and parasites before hibernating. The common names of many other plants reflect their usage by bears, such as bearberry, bear’s paw, bear tongue, and bear clover. As an animal that disappears in winter to reappear only in spring, the bear is also the symbol of renewal, rebirth, and the regaining of health. The ancient Greeks associated Artemis, goddess of plants and regeneration, with the bear; indeed, before marriage young Greek girls were secluded and called arktoi, or “she-bears” (interestingly, a menstruating Ojibwa woman was called Mako-wii, “bear woman”). Bear is also a species known for its strong maternal ties. The she-bear was worshipped by the Celts as the bear goddess Artio. And of course, Zeus changed Callisto into Ursa Major, the “Great She-Bear” of the sky. Bear medicine is powerful medicine, bringing healing, renewal, and rebirth. This is the gift that Grandmother Bear brings those who live in bear country. One of the greatest Mysteries of the Bear is the most remarkable fact that all the ancient people of the North Pole refer to the same seven north pole stars as the ‘Stars of the Bear’ which is held to be an impossibility, since the “experts” tell us that these ancient people had no contact with each other. In honor of the Bear Warriors of the Past and Present and Bear Medicine everywhere… FEATURED IN: / Mesoamerica

  • The Nez Perce once had over 5,000 Appaloosa horses.

  • Australian Bower Birds build elaborate nests with sticks, then they search for anything blue to decorate them with, they are such amazing birds.Taken with Canon 40D and 70-300mm EFS lens, through wire bars.

  • View other work from this series Bushland, Northern New South Wales, Australia / Best viewed LARGE Over bridge of sighs / To rest my eyes in shades of green / Under dreamin’ spires / To Itchycoo Park, that’s where I’ve been What did you do there? / I got high / What did you feel there? / Well I cried / But why the tears there? / I’ll tell you why / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful I feel inclined to blow my mind / Get hung up feed the ducks with a bun / They all come out to groove about / Be niceand have fun in the sun Tell you what I’ll do (what will you do?) / I’d like to go there now with you / You can miss out school (won’t that be cool) / Why go to learn the words of fools? / What will we do there? / We’ll get high / What will we touch there? / We’ll touch the sky / But why the tears then? / I’ll tell you why It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful I feel inclined to blow my mind / Get hung up feed the ducks with a bun / They all come out to groove about / Be nice and have fun in the sun It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / It’s all too beautiful / Ha! It’s all too beautiful Small Faces

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