Card series Wall Art

454 creative works found

  • Abstract digital mixed-media of flame fractals and photography /   /   / DATE OF CREATION : 2007.11.18th /   /   / DETAILS / This is part of a collaborative series I am starting with my dad over the internet, using some irisation photographies of his. / I couldn’t wait for his real size pictures files to start working with his material, so this one is only available as cards. /   /   / © 2007 Nodakami

  • Sculpture from Soroti, Uganda. 25% of sales will be donated to help house, feed, and educate 470 Ugandan Students of Beacon College in Soroti Uganda.

  • Sales of this Design? – 1 sale so far :) / Lady Marmalade (the mermaid) / Mixed Media ~ ink pastel acyrlic charcoal / Beach Series of cards and prints by Karin Taylor /

  • How many sales of this design – 1 sale so far :) / Special request for Traceyanne :) / Happy Birthday everyone!! / from Basil and Frazzle, aka Karin and Frozenfa

  • Love the Color!!! / So Pretty!!!!!! / panasonic dmc-fz 30 camera used / AS IS PHOTO

  • mixed media on canvas / 40×70cm ” The word “infinite”,like GOD,SPIRIT or others which have equivalents in all the languages,is not the expression of an idea, but the expression of the effort towards this idea or concept” EDGARD POE (Eureka) Copyright:All Rights Reserved / Registered:Sat May 17 15:50:55 MDT 2008 Title:ABSTRACT#3 / Description:PAINTING MIXED MEDIA ON CANVAS / MCN:C167E-57A44-ED2E1

  • / I can Stand on My Hands Ladies Lace Up Shoes now available at Zazzle / I can stand on my Hands Children’s Shoes Slipons at Zazzle I Can Stand On My Hands by Karin Taylor – created for Drawing Day ‘08 / A pen and pastel drawing on brown paper coated in stripes of white gesso! / from the Kids Series / / / /

  • How many sales of this item so far – 1 sale / / I can Stand on My Hands Ladies Lace Up Shoes now available at Zazzle / I can stand on my Hands Children’s Shoes Slipons at Zazzle / Shoes Now Available at Zazzle I Can Stand On My Hands, etc!! by Karin Taylor – created for Drawing Day ‘08 / A pen and pastel drawing on brown paper coated in stripes of white gesso! / from the Kids Series / / / / / / /

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery ============================================= / Sold a Framed Print – (406mm x 305mm) ============================================= / Snow Gum was Featured and chosen for Nature’s_Macro_Canvas Avatar of the Week – 5th July 2008. / Also Featured in: / Abstracts_from_Nature – 7th July 2008. / Textures_and_Materials – 9th July 2008. ============================================= / Snow Gum (Eucalyptus pauciflora) A medium-sized, often crooked tree has a short trunk to 1m diameter. It is low-branching with a spreading open crown. It sheds its bark in irregular patches in autumn, leaving a smooth white to yellow, olive-green or brown surface, occasionally with scribbly markings from insect lavae. Flowers appear in spring and early summer. They are white or cream.

  • Soulmates series / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations

  • Second in a series of dandelion seeds. Enjoy!

  • The ‘thirst’ [first] in the Beer Garden Series. Cornish Pride. / A nice pint of ‘Tribute Bitter’, brewed in St Austell, Cornwall, and enjoyed in many pubs in Cornwall and Devon. Would make an ideal Fathers Day Card, which is approaching fast. Hope you enjoy looking at this, as much as I enjoyed drinking it. LOL Best Viewed Large. Taken with my Sigma70-300, which was a gift from an anonymous Bubbler.

  • Self Portrait. I’ve become a bit of a solitaire addict as of late, so I guess you could call this my Guilty Pleasure!! / Experimenting with my new wireless remote, which is a bitch to use by the way. This is my White Rabbit photo for my Alice in Wonderland Series, it’s not quite the same style, so I haven’t made a big thing out of it, just tacked it on the end. But yes. It’s the white rabbit. Canon 450D. No geeky stuff, I can’t be bothered, it’s not like you miss it. ...I must admit though, I didn’t take the picture of the cards (shock horror!!) because I couldn’t find any. Instead, you can find it here somewhere in the middle of the page.. I’m sorry guys!! Cross-processed and the like on Photoshop CS3. Featured in: / The Woman Photographer / Redbubble Homepage 11th June 2009 / Canon DSLR / Model Beginnings / Young Enthusiasts x2 / That One Great Shot / Challenge Weekly / Artrageous RB artists / 1620 / European Everyday Life

  • CARDS
    by KEIT

    2008 featured in / Unconventional Artistry 06/09 / The Grunge Art Gallery 07/09

  • Another in the Ladybug Series! This is the little lady that had saved from the swimming pool!! I decided to work on a few more of the images I had of her from that day. This was taken at my home in Odessa, Texas with a Panasonic FZ50 FEATURES and CHALLENGEWINS and TOP 10 / 1.The Classic Lady ( Ladybug Series ) / 2.This was Featured in > The AW Group! 06/28/2009 / 3.This was Featured in the > Butterflies,Skippers, Moths and Other Winged Insects! 06/29/2009 / 4.This was Featured in >The Ladybugs Group! 07/01/2009 The Classic Lady ( Ladybug Series ) / The Classic Lady 2 ( Ladybug Series ) /

  • paint, ink, pencil on card paper / 8.5×11”

  • More of the girls Nat and Deanna. / Series

  • Feature Image – Colour and Light Group / Feature Image – Photography 101 Group / Feature Image – First Things Group / / Shot of the Month/Featured Artist December 2009 – Nikon D40 Users Group Interior warmth at The Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise in Alberta, Canada Nikon D40X / Nikkor 18-55mm Nikkor lens / f8 / 1/250th / I took an exposure reading on the lamp which would then give sufficient light to bring in the detail of the exterior landscape. **Note Unlike the others in this series, the lake in this is Ice free Lake Louise, Banff National Park – Alberta – Canada My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. / All photographs in this portfolio are owned and copyright / © Barbara Burkhardt. / Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from ourselves is prohibited. All rights reserved. For license fees please contact me by email at pictureperfectaust@yahoo.com.au

  • Here is a updated version of one of my oil paintings. myspace.com/artistmind Im considering finding a gallery soon in the Los Angeles area. Feel free to tell galleries/or friends about my redbubble account or myspace. Thank you for your support.

  • oil on wood myspace.com/Artistmind Sylvia Lizarraga

  • ...and the past it’s just the beginning… / ...from “Impossible love” series / Painting by Dorina Costras / Original for sale / Acrylic on canvas / 55/70 cm ”...and the past it’s just the beginning”...from “Impossible love” series” was featured in First Things 21 nov.2009

  • This is the official mascot for the BoneYard Series as it was found living in one of the old cars …I have no idea what kind of spider he is , but he had definitly moved into and taken over the old car and wasn’t about to leave!! / My sister thinks he mite be a Banana Spider??? This was taken in Lampasas, Texas with a Panasonic Fz 50 FEATURES and CHALLENGE WINS and TOP 10 PLACES 1. This was Featured in … JPG-Cast Offs Group 11/29/2009 The BoneYard Mascot ~ ( BoneYard Series ) / INFO IS FROM … WIKIPEDIA / And I would like to thank … JOHAN for looking up what this spider was and providing me with the information!! Mine is a Female… / The spider species Argiope aurantia is commonly known as the Black and Yellow Garden Spider, Writing Spider, Banana Spider or Corn Spider. It is common to the lower 48 of the United States, Hawaii, southern Canada, Mexico, and Central America. They have distinctive yellow and black markings on their abdomens and a mostly white cephalothorax. Males range from 5 to 9 mm; females from 19 to 28 mm. Like other members of Argiope they are considered harmless to humans. Habitat / Garden Spiders often build webs in areas adjacent to open sunny fields where they stay concealed and protected from the wind. The spider can also be found along the eaves of houses and outbuildings or in any tall vegetation where they can securely stretch a web. The circular part of the female’s web may reach two feet in diameter. Webs are built at elevations from two to eight feet off the ground. / Female Argiope aurantia spiders tend to be somewhat local, often staying in one place throughout much of their lifetime. / The web of the yellow garden spider is distinctive: a circular shape up to 2 feet in diameter, with a dense zigzag of silk, known as a stabilimentum, in the center. The purpose of the stabilimentum is disputed. It is possible that it acts as camouflage for the spider lurking in the web’s center, but it may also attract insect prey, or even warn birds of the presence of the otherwise difficult-to-see web. Only those spiders that are active during the day construct stabilimenta in their webs. / Female A. aurantiaTo construct the web, several radial lines are stretched among four or five anchor points that can be more than three feet apart. The radial lines meet at a central point. The spider makes a frame with several more radial lines and then fills the center with a spiral of silk, leaving a 5/16” to 3/8” gap between the spiral rings, starting with the innermost ring and moving outward in a clockwise motion. To ensure that the web is taut, the spider bends the radial lines slightly together while applying the silk spiral. The female’s web is substantially larger than the male’s, who builds a small zig-zag web nearby. The spider occupies the center of the web, usually hanging head-down, waiting for prey to become ensnared in the web. If disturbed by a possible predator, she may drop from the web and hide on the ground nearby. The web normally remains in one location for the entire summer, but spiders can change locations usually early in the season, perhaps to find better protection or better hunting. / The Garden Spider can oscillate her web vigorously while she remains firmly attached in the center. This action might prevent predators like wasps and birds from drawing a good bead, and also to fully entangle an insect before it cuts itself loose. / In a daily ritual, the spider consumes the circular interior part of the web and then rebuilds it each morning with fresh new silk. The radial framework and anchoring lines are not usually replaced when the spider rebuilds the web. The spider may be recycling the chemicals used in web building. Additionally, the fine threads that she consumes appear to have tiny particles of what may be minuscule insects and organic matter that may contain nutrition. / The Garden Spider does not live in very dense location clusters like other orb spiders such as the Golden Orb Web Spider. The Garden Spider keeps a clean orderly web in comparison to the cluttered series of webs built and abandoned by groups of Golden Orb Spiders. Reproduction / Male A. aurantiaYellow garden spiders breed once a year. The males roam in search of a female, building a small web near or actually in the female’s web, then court the females by plucking strands on her web. Often, when the male approaches the female, he has a safety drop line ready, in case she attacks him. After mating, the male dies, and is sometimes then eaten by the female. / She lays her eggs at night on a sheet of silky material, then covers them with another layer of silk, then a protective brownish silk. She then uses her legs to form the sheet into a ball with an upturned neck. Egg sacs range from 5/8” to 1” in diameter. She often suspends the egg sac right on her web, near the center where she spends most of her time. Each spider produces from one to four sacs with perhaps over a thousand eggs inside each. She guards the eggs against predation as long as she is able. However, as the weather cools, she becomes more frail, and dies around the time of the first hard frost. / In the spring, the young spiders exit the sac and are so tiny that their collection of bodies look like dust gathered inside the silk mesh. Some of the spiderlings remain nearby, but others exude a strand of silk that gets caught by the breeze, carrying the spiderling to a more distant area. Eating habits / Female garden spiders are the ones you see in large webs. Their webs usually have a ‘Z’ shaped line in the middle of them going vertical. Their webs are where they spend most of their time, and it for the purpose of catching food. When an insect gets caught in the web the garden spider will usually shake the web back and forth to further trap the insect or let the insect fall if not secured in the net well enough. Then the the spider will go to the insect in the web and bite it, injecting its venom. Then, after the insect is subdued the spider will wrap it in her web with her back legs. Sometimes she will move the now wrapped insect to the middle of her web and repair the rest of the web that got damaged in the capturing of the insect. The BoneYard Mascot ~ 2 ( BoneYard Series ) /

  • I have gotten alot of emails and sales on this one decided to showcase it here. J.Mclean© 2009

  • My 1st of a set of 6 enjoy!! The entitled artwork called Expressions showcases ethnic angel gold card series in a set of 6 for sale for the holidays. J.Mclean© 2009

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