Digital butterflies on green
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Black-necked Stork flying over Roebuck Bay, Broome, Western Australia.
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia This Black Kite was flying low over the red sand dunes of Roebuck Bay, Broome Western Australia
A Bald eagle silhouette against the moon.
These birds are magnificent on their own, but if your lucky enough to get a breath taking back ground, all the better!
been reading about tribal child raising and the benefits, and we know I like birds… I began this art as abstract patterns, bubbles of pattern that transformed when I realised by putting a ‘fork in the road’ to the concentric circles, that I created an eye and beak. Before that, it could’ve been shown either way up. also, it transformed from earthy brown colours, to a colourful bird. ‘Is it art? ‘my teacher used to always question. He’s not here now. He’s just asking the question still! in my head! I like it-it’s bright, colouful and alive.
It take a bald eagle five years to reach full maturity, this one is almost there.
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Grey Fantail with it’s little chick.Photo taken in the Myall Lakes National Park, NSW, Australia. Canon EOS 20D, Canon100 – 400L IS lens at 400mm – 1/800@ f/7.1, ISO 400 hand held
Early morning mist rising off the mountain side.
It’s extremely satisfying when as a photographer you capture an image like this. It’s that microsecond of crystallisation of all factors that make a great image (even if I say so myself). / This is a female Galah ( a native Australian Parrot) that is both numerous and widespread in this country. Large flocks of them frequent grain and cropland areas and they are even more common in some suburban areas with parks and gardens than they used to be.
Belief, hope and imagination are perhaps the three most important ingredients in life (love is a given). It’s been said that a picture needs not be explaind, but I want to tell how I arrived to the version you see. I was looking at the picture as I took it and, from a certain bent of my imagination, I had the impression it looked a bit like a bird with the wings spread in flight. And that inspired me to give the original a “magic touch” and make it look more like a dream flight. The transition into blur and B&W would like to depict the undefined boundaries between the normal awareness state and the dream state, that particular place or state where anything and everything is possible and where all the miracles of creation happen: the land between the ordinary and the miraculous. I hope I have captured that essence. / / 08 December, 2007 —- / 90-46-988 - 09-11-26 / -—- /
100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of a Glaucous-winged Gull taken against an overcast sky in Glacier Bay, Alaska.
Wild American kestrel (Falco sparverius) in flight, stooping from left to right (Taken at Eagle Bluffs Conservation Area, 5 miles southwest of Columbia, Missouri). Perhaps the most colorful raptor in the world, the American Kestrel is the most common falcon in North America. It is found from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, and in towns as well as wild lands. Identifying marks inlcude small size, rufous back and tail, and two dark mustache marks on face. Male has blue-gray wings and a lightly spotted chest and belly. The larger female has rufous wings barred with black, and streaking on the chest. This particular bird is a female. Their call is a loud series of “klee-klee-klee” notes when excited. As with many other raptors in North America, their population n umbers dramatically declined in the 1950’s and 1960’s, but have increased greatly in recent decades with increasing deforestation of North America. They are aslo commonly called Sparrow hawk. Although hover-hunting is conspicuous, this foraging method actually is used rather infrequently. It is used most often when suitable perches are not available, or when winds are strong enough to create updrafts favorable to hovering. In winter in many southern parts of the range, female and male American Kestrels use different habitats. The female uses the preferred more open habitat, and the male uses areas with more trees. This situation appears to be the result of the females migrating south first and establishing winter territories. The males then are forced into the less preferred areas. Nestling kestrels back up, raise their tails, and squirt feces onto the walls of the nest cavity. The feces dry on the cavity walls and stay off the nestlings. The nest gets to be a smelly place, with feces on the walls and uneaten parts of small animals on the floor. Source used to construct this page: Smallwood, J. A., and D. M. Bird. 2002. American Kestrel (Falco sparverius). In The Birds of North America, No. 602 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA. MORE INFO ON Am. Kestrel HERE 100% of all proceeds from sales of this image will go to the HawkWatch International DONATE ONLINE
Equipment used: / Nikon D70s / Sigma 18-200mm f3.5-6.3 DC Location: / Geestmerambacht, Noord-Holland, The Netherlands Map: / Road Map , Terrain , Satellite Copyright: / © Brendan Schoon , All rights reserved. Background Information: / Swans are birds of the family Anatidae, which also includes geese and ducks. Swans are grouped with the closely related geese in the subfamily Anserinae where they form the tribe Cygnini. Sometimes, they are considered a distinct subfamily, Cygninae. Swans usually mate for life, though ‘divorce’ does sometimes occur, particularly following nesting failure. The number of eggs in each clutch ranges from three to eight. Swan / Grazing Cows / Banff National Park, Moraine Lake / Bryce Canyon National Park, The Lonely Tree / Purden Lake / Sunset in Tofino / Grand National Park, Hazy View / Life / Acrobatic Move /
Hummingbird getting ready to land on the feeder. Canon 40D, Canon 70mm-200mm lens.
Three seagulls in flight – composite image
My first practise with the new 100-400mm zoom lens I had for Christmas / Canon EOS 400D / The lake was removed from this pic and the flood filter inserted in its place to get more reflection from the swan. THE ORIGINAL PHOTO / / WITH FLOOD FILTER / /
Coastal Mantra Series- Flying Meditation has been nominated for the prestigious Pay it Forward Group by Kellie Cranmer of Kcranmer Art Kellies quote to the group in submitting this image was: ”I chose this image because of the simple beauty it brings. Sometimes you can get the best impact by a bird flying…as nature would intend it to do…and Lina captured it so beautifully!! Also…Lina is one amazing soul. She is the type to care for others before herself (I feel that in her so much)...so it is my honor to nominate my friend Lina to the Pay it Forward…You deserve it girl and so much more!!! xoxoxoxox” I am completely honored. I feel Kellie knows and understands how much Art has healed my life and continues to open up the creative connections that fill me up to the brim. Thank you so much Kellie and to the Group Pay It Forward. I want you all to know how wonderful I feel today with such incredible news. A Collaboration FLYING MEDITATION / BY: Billy F. and Linaji / 2009 Meditation, / A view in front of me / Consuming Me. / I am flying and in-between / There is my lofty view / And nothing else, / No Sound / No Breeze, / Not even a source of light / Every distraction vanishes / On these wooded hills, / Gone, subdued and shrouded / By the mists / By the tone / Monochrome, just / Positioning myself to the background / Where too, / No reference / No context / exists, / Just me, / Like a bird in flight / Negotiating nothing / Arriving no where, / Coming from / A notion called forever. / Art form / Formless / Faith.
The Flying Fox, or Fruit Bat are mammals and members of the Pteropodidae family. This one caught in flight near Noosa Hinterlands. Canon 50D 400mm. Available Large!
I was totally in Awe as these beautiful birds flew overhead yesterday evening shooting in the Noosa Basin again.. I noticed them in the distance a few days back, with my earlier shots, and was determined to get these close. I didn’t manage to get too close unfortunately, but did snap this one. They come here in the evenings to hang out on a small dead tree. I will get these close one day soon :) Fingers crossed they hang around for a while. They have a beautiful “sing” call, rather than the other species of cockatoo seems to be more a “squark”.. Canon 50D, 400mm. Noosa Basin, Noosaville, Queensland. This was the last shot I managed to get with the 1/400 shutter, then most the captured were blurred due to low light. Available Large, best viewed large!
Osprey in flight with fish in talons, products are created using a razor sharp image and large file size. Beautiful T-shirts with different colors and styles are also available with this image: Osprey Fishing T-shirt A companion image is also available: Bad Idea! Calendars Too: Calendar Gallery Canon 40D camera, Canon 500mm IS 4.0 Lens, Tripod with Ballhead Mount. For discussion of shutter speed, f-stop, available light, and my technique, please visit my profile page…thank you :-) Location: Everglades, Florida
1/60 second / f/4 / 600 mm focal length / Canon 1D Mark III Santa Barbara, California Panning with the motion of the birds as they skim the water hoping to catch a fish.
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