Feathered fowl 

326 creative works found

  • Mallard takes an early morning swim

  • Wood Duck…aix sponsa…...puts a whole new meaning on getting red eyed

  • The male pea fowl – one of the most beautiful creatures on this earth.

  • Beauty of Nature – the plumage of the male pea fowl.

  • A little something different for this photograph. Tried my hand at some Photoshop art using the colours derived from Mr Perfect’s feathers. Special thanks to nineveh for the brushes used to create my artwork. Nineveh can be found on Deviant Art website. Please check out the painted artwork of Mr Eric Shepherd whom I was priviliged enough to have immortalise Mr Perfect here

  • The White Peacock is frequently mistaken for an albino, but it is a colour variety of Indian Blue Peacock. Its white colour makes it looks really magnificent and elegant. / / Please view the large image for best details! / Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • Caught this peacock yesterday in the snow! Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!

  • Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy! / animals, fowl, bird, egrets, egret, flight, swim, stand, feathers, lilies, lily, flowers, floral, plants, 3d, render, rendering, digital, artwork, lisa weber, landscape, water, lake, river, terrain, waterscape,

  • I was at the park today testing out the new camera and as soon as I stopped the car this flock of Ducks came waddling over. Just as I snapped the pic this one in the front goes and stands on one leg. Thought it was a cool shot. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography

  • Captive male peacock.

  • Atsá
    by Sena

    Atsá – Eagle Eagle, the master of the sky, is considered a carrier of prayers. Many Indian Nations honor this bird as possessing courage, wisdom, and a special connection to the creator. This is often confused with the “thunderbird” image concept. Eagle is also a Directional Protector(the Sky) spirit, and an image associated with spirits and visions. My depiction represents three Bald Eagles circling about the Sun, here symbolized by the sacred Zia (Zia Pueblo word for ‘Sun’). Its rays marking the four directions; in the year, with its four seasons; in the day, with the sunrise, noon, evening, and night; in life, with its four divisions—childhood, youth, manhood, and old age. Everything is bound together in a circle of life and love, without beginning, without end.

  • Image copyright © 2008 Abeque Wikimac. Copying and displaying or redistribution of this image without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited.

  • Atsá
    by Sena

    Atsá (Diné [Navajo] word for eagle). Eagle, the master of the sky, is considered a carrier of prayers. Many Indian Nations honor this bird as possessing courage, wisdom, and a special connection to the creator. This is often confused with the “thunderbird” image concept. Eagle is also a Directional Protector(the Sky) spirit, and an image associated with spirits and visions. / My depiction represents three Bald Eagles circling about the Sun, here symbolized by the sacred Zia (Zia Pueblo word for ‘Sun’). Its rays marking the four directions; in the year, with its four seasons; in the day, with the sunrise, noon, evening, and night; in life, with its four divisions—childhood, youth, manhood, and old age. Everything is bound together in a circle of life and love, without beginning, without end.

  • This little guy (gal?) was hanging out in a neighbor’s tree. He showed an amazing amount of patience - or curiosity - as I climbed ever closer for a shot. (This photo appeared in National Geographic Magazine in an ad for their ‘Daily Dozen.’) / —-—-—-—-—-—- / Shot with a Nikon D100 and Sigma 50-500 lens / —-—-—-—-—-—- / Photographed in Santa Rosa Beach, Walton County, N.W. Florida

  • Ring-necked pheasants are native to China and East Asia, but they have been successfully introduced in other parts of the world, including North America. Males are vibrantly colored with blue-green heads, red face wattles, and distinctive white neck rings. Females are a rather plain buff brown, but both sexes have long, pointed tails. These beautiful birds are wily in the wild and much sought after by game hunters. Thousands of them are harvested each year, but management and reintroduction programs boost many populations. Males (also known as “cocks”) establish harems of hens—as many as a dozen female birds. Each spring a male delineates and defends his territory and his harem from aggressive rivals. Such encounters can lead to vicious battles. The birds prefer fields and farmlands with brushy cover, though they also inhabit woodland undergrowth and some wetlands. Females nest in fields or in border habitat and lay a dozen or more eggs, which they incubate with no help from the cock. Young pheasants grow up quickly and can fly within two weeks. They will remain with their mother for six or seven weeks. Many pheasant eggs are destroyed by predators or by humans (particularly in farm country), and young birds also have a high mortality rate. In autumn, ring-necked pheasants form flocks in which they will live until the following spring. These birds are most comfortable on the ground, where they forage for grains, seeds, berries, insects, and, occasionally, small animals. They can fly and launch themselves airborne with an abrupt, noisy takeoff, but typically run from trouble. Pheasant flights are merely short-distance dashes for cover.

  • Seagull prepares for landing. Santa Barbara CA Nikon D90 / 80-200/2.8 / 1/800 f4.5 / 100 ISO Featured: “Live, Love, Dream 1/20/2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-- I will donate 50% of all proceeds from the sale of this image and the ones below to the American Bird Conservancy

  • Watercolor on Bainbridge Board – Cold Pressed 12” x 16”

  • My girlfriend attended a Native American PowPow today and took the image below of this goregeous eagle and asked to see what i could do with it, here’s how I incorporated it into a wonderful 3d rendered image for her. / Original resource image taken by Tracy Rebando © 2009

  • Portrait of a Red Tail Hawk. / /

  • Mallard duck The mallard is a large and heavy looking duck. It has a long body and a long and broad bill. The male has a dark green head, a yellow bill, is mainly purple-brown on the breast and grey on the body. The female is mainly brown with an orange bill. It breeds in all parts of the UK in summer and winter, wherever there are suitable wetland habitats, although it is scarcer in upland areas. Mallards in the UK may be resident breeders or migrants – many of the birds that breed in Iceland and northern Europe spend the winter here. / Where to see them It is the commonest duck and most widespread so you have a chance of seeing it just about anywhere where there is suitable wetland habitat, even in urban areas. / When to see them All year round. / What they eat Seeds, acorns and berries, plants, insects and shellfish.

  • No, not the road. / This large Cockerel was strutting around Brownsea Island, in Poole Harbour, Dorset. / The sun shining on him showed all his lovely colours. So, why did the Chicken cross the road??? / To see Gregory Peck. Boom Boom. LOL Thank you for looking. / Hope you like it. Best Viewed Large.

  • Seventh artwork in my animal ICON series. Original artwork measures 11×14 inches, mixed media (oil pastels, colored pencils, gold paint pen, black marker) on blue canson paper. View more of my artwork at http://www.lynnetteshelley.com

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