Currawong 

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60 creative works found

  • One of my favourite birds The Currawong, these birds are simply awesome.

  • Taken on a camera club outing. / F22 / 1/180 / ISO 200 -0.3 EV / Spot metering / Nikon D200

  • i loved this wharf on the pittwater, the cottages look beautiful, a pretty little beach / with bush surrounding. I’m doing a whole series of these wharfs. I also really liked the Currawong logos, i’ve changed them a little to balance out the signs. / This is a painting on canvas, real nails hammered thru the sign and on the wharf posts.

  • I grew up with the bush myth that the Currawongs were rainbirds and when you heard them, then the rain was sure to follow. I have found this myth to be freakish in accuracy. When every the Black Jays visit or I here their call, rain does seem to follow. I am occasionally blessed with their presence in the tall stringbark that occupies my backyard. I heard their calls the other day, and feel very blessed. Let it rain, let it rain, let it rain. / Oil pastel on paper.

  • Currawong considering stealing our lunch. (We won!) / Photographed at Dove Lake, Cradle Mountain on 27th august 2008.

  • The Currawong is an Australian native bird that is related to the Crow, Raven and Magpie. Distinctive differences are the yellow eyes, the slight hook beak and white tipped tail. It’s a very curious bird, not as territorial as the Magpie, but a bit of a thief! Don’t leave your car windows open or handbags out around these guys, they like to take anything shiny back home to impress the ladies with. Location: Lemonthyme Lodge, near Cradle Mountain, Tasmania.

  • Unfortunately this old church is struggling to stay open. As a lot of the churches in the little villages are. / Such stories these walls could tell. Hebrews 10:25 comes to mind. / “Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another – and all the more as you see the Day approaching.” The Church (loosely speaking), means a body of people. I guess we don’t need a building. But rather to remember the scripture. Nikon D200 / Nikkor 18-200mm VR f3.5-5.6 lens / f8 / 1/500 shutter / ISO 200 / Ev0.0 / 18mm focal length

  • This is one of my best images I think, that I ever took. / It’s a Tasmanian Currawong taken on my last trip to Cradle Mountain. ( not a crow and not a raven ) / With this intense stare, I thought it good enough to give it another whirl. / I also think that it is very Gothic, as it is kept simple and to the point. / Also, the stare gets into your soul. / Whenever I look at it, I seem to get shivers up the back of my neck…. / Taken with a p&s Panasonic Lumix FZ30. ========================== All profits from the sale of this work will be donated to Wildlife-Appeal. / . Click here ==========================

  • The black currawong – endemic to Tasmania and a common visitor to Collinsvale.

  • 2008 / 72×108cm / Etching, aquatint, drypont and linocut on recycled survey plan and Stonehenge paper More work inspired by my home in Collinsvale. I think the Currawong is probably a representation of myself . . . if I was to go all weird about it.

  • This Pied Currawong swears that he personally knew alfred hitchcock and had worked on the film The Birds / and who was i to argue…...... Olympus SP-500UZ http://images-0.redbubble.net/img/art/framecolor:black/framestyle:flat30/mattecolor:black/product:framed-print/size:small/view:preview/2567189-2-pied-currawong.jpg! / !

  • Donated by Robert Elliott All profits from purchasing this work and any others in this profile will be donated to the Wildlife victims of the Victorian bush fires.

  • Donated by Larry Davis All profits from purchasing this work and any others in this profile will be donated to the Wildlife victims of the Victorian bush fires

  • Pied Currawong common nomad in forest, woodland urban and rural areas. / Shooting Info , / Nikon D700 / Nikon 70mm- 200mm @ 200 mm / Iso 3200 / AP f4 / Exposure 1/ 2000sec. /

  • Pied Currawong common nomad in forest, woodland urban and rural areas. / Shooting Info , / Nikon D700 / Nikon 70mm- 200mm @ 105 mm / Iso 3200 / AP f4 / Exposure 1/ 4000sec. / All comments and favs are really appreciated !!! /

  • All the other birds used to laugh and call the Currawong Fatso!

  • This Currawong followed me from spot to spot at Evans Lookout in the Blue Mountains National Park, just near Blackheath. He was singing his melodious song as if to charm me. As he settled onto the branch of this dead tree, I thought it was my chance to get a shot at him … with my Nikon D80.

  • I was out shooting a rainbow this afternoon, one of the many I saw today, and upon returning I spied these Currawongs sitting on the next door neighbours fence. Taken with a Panasonic FZ-18 For more beautiful images of Tasmania please visit RT Gallery

  • The Black Currawong is endemic to Tasmania and lives in a range of habitats. They can be noisy, especially when there are a lot in one area. They have a distinctive call. This Currawong sat up and posed for me as I took the shot, I’m sure he must have had his photo taken before. Taken with a Panasonic FZ-18 For more beautiful images of Tasmania please visit RT Gallery

  • Digital Collage. The Currawong is a large bird endemic to Tasmania. I took these photos of the Currawongs at Lake St Clair in Tasmania’s central highlands in 2007. The woman and baby photo I took in Sapa, Vietnam in 2003. The wallpaper and feather shape are from Bittbox and the crown is from Wikimedia Commons.

  • These beautiful birds do really like their photos taken. Taken with a Panasonic FZ-18 For more beautiful images of Tasmania please visit RT Gallery

  • Best viewed large This is a selection of images from my recent visit to Cradle Mountain, Tasmania. I stayed in the fabulous Cradle Mountain Lodge, and all of the creatures shown were wild and were right on my doorstep. The shots were taken with a Canon 5D and either a 100-400mm lens (wombats, pademelons, and currawong), a 24-105mm lens (landscape scene), or my 105mm macro lens (lizard feet). This composite was uploaded so that a card can be ordered as a special thankyou to a fabulous booking agent who did us a huge favour!

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