Fairy forest 

606 creative works found

  • More from the Lightscapes Set We were at a picnic when I needed the loo and being me I took my camera to just incase… and I’m glad I did as this was just around the corner!

  • Inspired from ‘The Visit’ a song by Loreena McKennitt. / I began to make this creation and i was singing her songs… My gallery is Copyright © Wandering Soul. All rights reserved. / All the materials contained in my gallery may not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my written permission. My images do not belong to the public domain. / Please read the Etiquette Policy and respect it! / Modifying, tubing, cropping, using it for letters or stationeries, layouts, backgrounds, stock, copyrighting, stealing my work is not only against the law but unethical. / Altaring or using without express written permission is stealing. View More ART here!

  • Featured on homepage 16.02.09 Full view please :) This is new genre for me, check out my other photomanipulations and let me know what you think! Stock Photo Credit / Background / Girl – Model / Butterflies / Moon

  • © Silas Toball Cover Illustration for the 2009 calendar “A Knock at the Door” published by Amber Lotus A Knock at the Door is a film (and available as book with DVD) which caused a small internet sensation when it circled the web and inspired a million viewers even just before the age of youtube. The film can be viewed for free on our website but is also available as book with DVD. For inspiration visit the Message from the Muse Blog! For our gallery of inspirational and mytho-poetic art visit Duirwaigh Studios Duirwaigh Studios: / There you can find prints, greeting cards, calendars, books and more that will make perfect gifts. Plus our inspirational film “A Knock at the Door” and more…

  • Some fantasy work in Photoshop / / Stock images provided from sxc.hu Forest provided by Andres Ojeda / Bench provided by Cristi Modoran / Rope provided by Ladyleaf

  • The Aos Sidhe (pronounced “ess shee”), are a powerful, supernatural race comparable to the fairies or elves of other traditions. / They live in an invisible world that coexists with the world of humans. / The Gaelic Otherworld is seen as being closer at the times of dusk and dawn, therefore this is seen as a time special to the Aos Sidhe, as are some of the festivals such as Samhain and Midsummer. The Aos Sidhe are generally described as stunningly beautiful, though they can also be terrible and hideous. I cursed myself for walking too deep into the forest and missing seeing the sunset from the view point high on the hillside like i intended, but the evening rays brought colour to the forest like I wouldnt have imagined. / The forest is very much still in green, but the backlighting from the sunset has given such warmth to the leaves. As it was so late in the day, this is a 1 second exposure. other photos from the forests around my home / / Loki’s Forest

  • A place to go and dream… and perhaps find your way to a secret world all your own. Light beams stock / Cobwebs stock © Aimee Stewart, Foxfires – please read my terms here: Click Here . / (Please do not repost this on Photobucket or Flickr!) / —-—-—-—-——-

  • All the Material in this Gallery is Copyrighted & May not be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission. / © AnaCBStudio: Using this Image for any purpose without my prior permission, may lead to legal action. All Rights Reserved. Background: my own photographs. / Model: by Elandria and used with permission. / I would like to thank Lanny for letting me use her image.

  • photomanipulation and digital painting.

  • photomanipulation done in photoshop cs3

  • photomanipulation and digital painting

  • By request – one of my earlier pieces. A very strange size, but fun nonetheless!

  • Rollerball on copier paper. Featured in All Things Black. / Featured in The Divine Feminine. / Tee featured in All Things Black. / Tee featured in Finks of Inks. Many many thanks to Tammy for posting in the Buyer’s Booth, and also Many many thanks to Anita for posting a pic in the Buyer’s Booth, which was featured on the home page :-)) Here’s the tee :-) Inspired by this fabulous forest painting. In most introductions to Greek religion, the nature deities are briefly noted as minor gods in the pantheon, overshadowed by the towering personalities and presences of the Olympian gods. Yet a quantitative analysis, were such a thing possible, would show that the vast numbers of river gods, nymphs, and other local deities accorded divine status by the Greeks made them a constant presence in daily life. Greek authors focus primarily on the city and its festivals, yet most Greeks were peasants who lived in the countryside and supported the towns through farming and herding. The experience of this majority certainly included a much closer acquaintance with the gods of the landscape than our literary sources suggest. The category of “nature deities” is a modern construct. All of the Greek gods were connected in one way or another with natural phenomena, so in some sense all are nature deities. Zeus was a god of rain, Poseidon of earthquakes, Artemis of wild beasts. Even deities like Athena whose panhellenic personae were focused on the cultural rather than the natural sphere could be called upon in a variety of contexts to influence natural processes, such as stopping a plague or helping to ensure good crops. A number of lesser deities, however, were nature gods in the sense that they personified specific features in the landscape or phenomena in the environment. From ‘A Land Full of Gods: Nature Deities in Greek Religion’, Chapter 3, by Jennifer Larson Dryads (Δρυάδες, sing.: Δρυάς) are tree nymphs in Greek mythology. In Greek drys signifies ‘oak,’ from an Indo-European root derew(o)- ‘tree’ or ‘wood’. Thus dryads are specifically the nymphs of oak trees, though the term has come to be used for all tree nymphs in general. “Such deities are very much overshadowed by the divine figures defined through poetry and cult,” Walter Burkert remarked of Greek nature deities (Burkert 1986, p174). They were normally considered to be very shy creatures, except around the goddess Artemis, who was known to be a friend to most nymphs. Dryads, like all nymphs, were supernaturally long-lived and tied to their homes, but some were a step beyond most nymphs. These were the hamadryads who were an integral part of their trees, such that if the tree died, the hamadryad associated with it died as well. For these reasons, dryads and the Greek gods punished any mortals who harmed trees without first propitiating the tree-nymphs. Link to Celtic Druids / Phillip Freeman, a classics professor, discusses a later reference to Dryades, which he translates as Druidesses, writing that “The fourth century A.D. collection of imperial biographies known as the Historia Augusta contains three short passages involving Gaulish women called “Dryades” (“Druidesses”).” He points out that “In all of these, the women may not be direct heirs of the Druids who were supposedly wiped out by the Romans—but in any case they do show that the druidic function of prophesy continued among the natives in Roman Gaul.” From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  • Photomanipulation and digital painting

  • This is an old image from 2007. / It’s a self portrait taken indoors with studio lighting and then I had a stock image of a forest I composed onto the background. It was done so long ago I don’t have the information on where I got the forest stock, so I can’t credit it. But it was a moderately used texture which doesn’t dominate the piece. The hair was saturated in PS. © Jessica Walker

  • “Mixed Media” Photo manipulation incorporating / stock photo alterations, digital painting, brushes, gradients and textures. Digital fine art in oil painting style by Maria Szollosi aka Mariska 08 / 2009 / / All Origional art work can be purchased through the artist. —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- Copyright notice: / All rights reserved. All images contained on these pages are © copyright protected by Mariska and any use of these images in any form without written permission will be considered an infringement of these copyrights.

  • Expectations / Baby Shower, pregnacy or just to show you care. / Available as a framed art print, mounted print, card and poster. The fairy mother waits patiently with her expectations. / Image copyright © 2009 Shanina Conway. / Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited

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