Earth moon 

310 creative works found

  • Nothing but life...
    by Imber

    US$6.32–US$144.40

    / MCN: C1495-E96B3-7C59E / / © Imber 2007. All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Imber. 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 the artist is strictly prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • Evil Moon
    by Ruben Flanagan aka (Flan)

    US$4.66–US$106.40

    A funny image of the old moon himself taking havick on earth after the space shuttle crashes into him.

  • TO MINE AND EVERYONE’S SURPRISE, THIS IS THE BEST SELLER !!!! / I THANK THE UNIVERSE AND THE MOON FOR THE INSPIRATION. Image created in Photoshop from an image in the Public Domain, obtained at Wikkipedia Commons.

  • Believe
    by Globalphotos

    US$4.99–US$114.00

    Once they all believed in dragons / When the world was fresh and young, / We were woven into legends, / Tales were told and songs were sung, / We were treated with obeisance, / We were honored, we were feared, / Then one day they stopped believing / On that day, we disappeared. / Now they say our time is over, / Now they say we’ve lived our last, / Now we’re treated with derision / Where once we ruled unsurpassed. / We must make them all remember, / In some way we must reveal / That our spirit lives forever— / We are dragons! We are real! ~ © Jack Prelutsky ©2008 Globalphotos All rights reserved. / All photographs, text and images by Globalphotos are the exclusive property of Globalphotos – protected under Australian and international copyright laws. / These images may not be reproduced, copied or manipulated without written permission. / No use for Public Domain. / Use of any image for another photographic concept or illustration is a violation of copyright. Modified background stock Photodream

  • Planetary Collision
    by Cliff Vestergaard

    US$5.16–US$117.80

    Earth Mars

  • earths shadow
    by Roslyn Lunetta

    US$5.65–US$129.20

    earths shadow

  • THE OAK TREE
    by Katseyes

    US$3.99–US$91.20

    Stripped of her beauty, she stands alone, firm and strong. / Falling into sleep as Autumn fades. A time to restore her energy spent. / The cold and bitter winds of winter encircle her, testing her. / But she is safe, her armour protecting her, securing her delicate core from the many elements, shielding her from harm. / The rings of time hardened around her, embracing her, allowing her to sleep without worry. / As every day passes, she will take from the sun, bask in the light of the moon and quench her thirst from the soil drawing strength from her foundations, allowing her to grow. / When the time is right and the warmth of the earth awakens her spirit she will yet again show us her splendour. Give us her beauty. /

  • A Lonely Planet In the Middle of Nothingness
    by The wizard of ed

    It was March 2005, somewhere near St Kilda....

    It was March 2005, somewhere near St Kilda. I was sitting in a room, on a sofa propped on milk crates, staring at the ceiling. Around my neck was a Philadelphia collar and in my hand was a bottle of gin. The collar was the only sign that I had recently broken my C1, 2 & T1 the gin was to stop me thinking about it. I was staring at the ceiling because it was reasonably tricky to stare anywhere else. I sat quietly contemplating my future. Next to me was a chap called Christopher Lansell, Crispy to his comrades, whom I’d known about 8 minutes. He started talking about some things, wild, imaginative things, I started to reply, and back he came with more, this went on quite successfully for a while. One of these crazy things was an idea he’d been playing with to install a 1:1 billion scale model of the Solar System somewhere in Melbourne. It seemed quite a good idea to me. Almost without any warning at all it was 9am on December 10 of that year, my return ticket to the UK forgotten in the back of a drawer somewhere, and 6 months out of date, my neck visible to all who cared to glance. I’m crouched at the door to our St Kilda studio, attempting to drill a hole into Pluto, except this Pluto is only 2mm in diametre, which makes it very tricky. And in half an hour it’s meant to be on a plinth somewhere near Port Melbourne. / / / / Building the Sun Having drummed up some media interest through an interview on ABC radio and an article in The Age and spent a few months constructing the Sun and nine planets by hand we were actually within minutes of taking our disjointed conversation live. / / / / / Painting the Planets / Planet bases Pluto / Mars / Neptune / Saturn / Jupiter / Having finally secured Pluto to it’s stand, we threw all the models in the back of a trailer and hightailed it to the beach, as we roared along the approach to the marina there was a sudden, and slightly sickening crunch. Crispy braked, we looked at each other in silent fear, then out through the back window of the Toyota. Rolling down the road in the vague direction of Acland Street was a 1.39m golden ball of plywood and satin. Hmmm. We exited the car at speed and, to the amusement of the residents, sprinted off after the star. It was not entirely unscathed, but it was still presentable, and anyway, we were out of time. The weekend was long and disgustingly hot, but the model was a success, large numbers of families turned up on their bikes, with their children, The Age article folded in their pockets, planning to ride the full 6km route to Pluto. And being mid summer the beach and passing traffic was plentiful. Seeing kids stand under the 1.28cm hand painted sphere that was Earth (I even managed to dust the Himalayas with some snow) and point out Australia before running 150m to the Sun and smacking it with their ice cream stained hands was quite rewarding. / Earth, a man with a beard & the Moon, which is as far as Man has ever actually travelled, allegedly. (But not the man with the beard, he may have been no further than Geelong, I don’t know) Mars / The Sun / / / By Sunday night we were knackered but content. Then things started getting interesting. Tony Wheeler, co-founder of Lonely Planet rang us up, said he’d heard about the project but had been out of the country and wondered if he could come and see the models, we, unsurprisingly said yes. Then the council rang us up and said they’d had a lot of calls from the general public asking when they were going to do the project again. They said they hadn’t done it in the first place. It was about this point that words like ‘permanent’ began to appear in conversations. We found a sculptor, Cameron Robbins, an eccentric and extremely talented man based in Collingwood, and commenced talks with the council. It was estimated at costing around $70,000, and so the tedious process of money raising became the focus, Tony pledged a large sum of his personal finances, as did some universities. Things looked good. Then the university pulled out, and we experienced our first wedge of bureaucratic council red tape. Things look bad. And that high and low was a microcosm of how it progressed for the next two years. With a hefty focus on the ‘This is just never going to happen’ line of thought. But now, three years and six months after a conversation on a sofa in St Kilda, there are some people down at the foreshore tidying up the metre high bluestone plinths the planets rest on, and no doubt someone polishing the 360kg of bronze that makes up the Sun, in preparation for the opening on September 21. And I’m going to miss it, because I’m in London, so if you have nothing better to do please pop down to the reserve north of the Marina at 4.45, take some photos, get yourself an epic sense of how fragile and unique Earth really is and give Crispy some support for the endless phone calls and meetings and rolls and rolls of tape he’s deftly sliced through. Pouring the bronze Planets / Saturn, Jupiter, Neptune, Uranus cooling off / Half of the Sun / All of the Sun / Polishing the Sun / The sculptor Cameron Robbins next to polished Sun / Saturn / Venus, Mars, Earth, Mercury & Pluto (yeah it’s not a planet anymore, but it was then) / Pouring concrete base for the Sun / Diamond saw cutting bluestone plinths for the planets / Plinths being lifted into place / / The Sun being moved into place / / / / Model Location / And if you ever see anyone chasing an enormous shining sphere down a road, go and give them a hand.

  • rebirth
    by DreaM

    US$4.32–US$30.88

    ... flying with new wings / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations

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

  • speak earth & bless me
    by bellmusker

    I wanted to wrench a tooth / from your jawbone. / so count your blessings / that I left you intact

    Never be afraid of the cycle turning; a dark spell for Hallowe’en. Tá mé réidh

  • African Moon
    by Ruth Palmer

    US$4.49–US$102.60

    Acrylic on masonite.

  • The hurting hidden moon
    by DreaM

    US$3.99–US$68.40

    ... or when the moon bleeds.

  • Peace on Earth
    by HollyK

    US$3.99–US$91.20

    I heard the bells on Christmas Day; their old familiar carols play, and wild and sweet the word repeat of peace on earth, good-will to men! / ~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-— / / -—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- / Created using two of my photographs and a bit of ps brushwork. Thank you to everyone in the Prize Challenges group for voting Peace on Earth in the top ten of the Christmas Hamper Challenge. /

  • Millenial Gathering
    by Peter Harpley

    US$3.99–US$91.20

    Digital Photo Montage Also available as a super high resolution Giclee print from my own website. (Illustrated here as a large print in a charcoal box frame. Click on the buy/preview button to see other options) This image and many others are also available as MUGS T-SHIRTS and CARDS at ZAZZLE (You may need to register to purchase here)

  • GAIA II
    by webgrrl

    US$28.99

    slight different variation of colours made into card/wallart too /

  • ASTEROID / OIL / $500 US (ORIGINAL (8” X 10”) / SIGNED DEDICATED PRINTS AVAILABLE How far can I see? Are there boundaries and limits to dreams? Last night I traveled to a distant place so far away there yet remains no maps or charts for these territories. My travels were filled with awe and amazement at the new vistas I encountered. Planets, stars and asteroids of indescribable beauty and form presented themselves for my perusal and enjoyment. As morning broke I arrived back from where I started lying in my bed grasping to remember the wonders I beheld the night before. How can I reveal what marvels I surveyed with common ordinary paint and canvas? I know I will fall short of my desired goal of relating this experience but I must try. It is what I do. I am an artist. And artists paint. So I paint this small, modest and lesser account of what I chanced upon last night. I know that my attempt lacks the expanse and profundity of my experience but I still must try. So forgive my inept abilities to present my encounter in the way I wish I could. But if you are what do and you don’t then your not. I have tried to live by this little aphorism. It has served me well. So, here I go again trying to be and do what I think I must. Just a simple artist who pushes oil paint upon a canvas striving to be a little bit better one canvas at a time. visionary imagist “Joey”

  • GEMINI
    by Madeline M. Allen

    US$5.99–US$136.80

    Smudge Art TM. By: Madeline M. Allen Thank you for viewing my work. Image copyright © 2007, Madeline M. Allen Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

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

  • Heaven and Earth
    by Dawne Olson

    US$3.99–US$91.20

    I’ve was sprinting back and forth across our yard the past few nights… pointing my camera towards the glorious sunsets in the West and then racing to the back pasture to capture the astonishing moon rise in the East. It has been a fun couple of evenings and I am having a hard time deciding which images to post. I liked this one in particular because the grass blade feels like it helps anchor the moon at the earths horizon. When the moon first appears it is blood red… (I haven’t processed those pictures yet!) and it is ENORMOUS!! That is one of my favorite moments though, when it seems like heaven and earth are so close.

  • The Arrival
    by Lisa Weber

    US$4.49–US$102.60

    Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) / Visit My Complete Redbubble for all My 3D Artwork & Products

  • Soul mates series / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations

  • MIDNIGHT ON THE TUNDRA
    by Madeline M. Allen

    US$5.99–US$136.80

    My inner rumblings reflect my personal trials, dreams, needs and obligations. My Artwork reflects who I am! / / MIDNIGHT ON THE TUNDRA / / / Photography / Fractal Art / By: Madeline M. Allen Thank you for viewing my work Image copyright © 2008, Madeline M. Allen / Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited*

  • Lunar Eclipse
    by Shane Walker

    US$5.32–US$121.60

    Took this around 9.00pm 28/08/07

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