Flower honey 

639 creative works found

  • This honey bee on my Ceanothus in my back garden was so weighed down by pollen – and yet there always seems to be room for a bit more!

  • For the Flower Power Project Screensaver ___ All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. / © 2007 Joyce Dickens: Using my images for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action.

  • The background is the rest of the orange cosmos garden! Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • I found these Poppy seed pods on our house hunting venture and just loved their shape, colour and texture and taking these photos definitely took my mind off the move! The name of this image came from my kids as they call them tiny honey pots. Enjoy.

  • This morning I found this spider sleeping on my ‘honey pot’ poppy seed pods and so the next thing I did was get the camera out of course! This photo is 100% natural and untouched.

  • Honey Pot Blooms is a mixed media production from Karin Taylor, done in ink pastel acrylic and charcoal on pastel paper, no special computer effects were added, ‘cept a slight brightening of the colour to lift it a little /

  • What would I do without this garden? Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • POTD Digital Image Cafe August 31, 2008.

  • The delicate little bell-shaped flowers of Sicilian Honey garlic – Nectaroscordium siculum /

  • Well I think so – don’t really know one bee from another apart from some are fluffier- and the Michaelmas Daisies were a buzz with bees of all varieties- so just took the two! Featured in the group Plight Of The Bumble Bee. March 2009 / Placed in the Top Ten – Bee and Wasp Passion Challenge – May 2009

  • Another macro shot from the Sigma 150 f2.8 marco. Dropped the levels seriously after playing with selective colour. Cropped it in a little tighter for effect together with unsharp mask! Other Categories / Animals / Apes / Architecture / Baby Animals / Bears / Birds / Big Cats / Elephants / Fish / Insects / Macro / Nature / Reptiles

  • “Nature is neither kind nor cruel. Nature just is.” (Sir David Attenborough) THE SUBJECT: / The title is apt as I photographed this little Diaea evanida (Flower Spider) as she was preparing her catch, an Apis mellifera (European Honey Bee), for dinner around 5pm on a mid-spring day. / The flower is a Actinotus helianthi (Flannel Flower), an iconic Aussie wildflower. THE LOCATION: / The shot was made while on a solo wildflower safari at Grant’s Head, Bonny Hills, NSW, Australia. THE MAKING of ‘Dinner at Five 2/2’: / I was all twisted up like a pretzel as I tried to get a good angle of shot under the flower, set the metering, get the focus and frame the shot while my subject was trying to get away from me and my Fuji. There was a price to pay. I got a tick under my watchband. I didn’t notice it until after I got home and it was a minor operation to dig it out intact. / The trick with the exposure was to meter off the very bright Flannel Flower and lock it then focus on the subject and use the flash to compensate and fill shadows. / Fuji S9600: RAW, Manual settings of f/3.6 @ 1/400sec, Manual focus, Pop-up flash at lowest power, Hand held. / Lightroom 1.1 & Photoshop CS3. Visit the Insects & Spiders collection in my BubbleSite Gallery for more multi-legged critters. UPDATE: / 13-01-09 / The judge for the Port Macquarie Panthers Camera Club December 2008 Open Competition awarded my spider ‘n’ bee a Merit Certificate in the Large Colour Print section. UPDATE: / 19-03-09 / My bee munchin’ Arachnid has been featured in the Arachnids Group. Enjoy! HYMENOPTERA & SPIDERS HYMENOPTERA / (Click the links!) Apis mellifera & Thomisus spectabilis / Apis mellifera & Thomisus spectabilis / Apis mellifera / Apis mellifera & Protea / Apis mellifera & Lagunaria bracteata / Trigona carbonaria & Onopordum acanthium / Trigona carbonaria, Apis mellifera & Nymphaea violacea / / Polistes humilis / SPIDERS / (Click the links!) Argiope keyserlingi / Deinopis subrufa / Araneus bradleyi / Nephila plumipes / Nephila plumipes / Nephila plumipes / Diaea evanida – Last Stand / Diaea evanida / Diaea evanida / Tetragnatha sp /

  • They are a great match….... / Canon 40D + 300mm Rainbow Lorikeet Scientific name: Trichoglossus haematodus / Family: Psittacidae / Order: Psittaciformes / What does it look like? The Rainbow Lorikeet is unmistakable with its bright red beak and colourful plumage. Both sexes look alike, with a blue (mauve) head and belly, green wings, tail and back, and an orange/yellow breast. They are often seen in loud and fast-moving flocks, or in communal roosts at dusk.

  • I used this royalty free clipart I purchased and some of my own photos and textures to make a new piece who’s title is inspired by the Tori Amos song Daisy Dead Petals. The lyrics are below because I can’t find a recording online. / / daisy dead petals / that is her name / she’s in a phone booth phase, so / underneath the shade of a peppermint tray / she can turn it out with a heel on / she just rides into town / knowing what they’ll say / knowing they’re around the corner / got a crack in / got a crack in some strange places daisy dead petals / that is her name / so maybe she tastes like a hamburger maid, well / these dead petals, honey, brought me here / she said, “these dead petals, honey, brought me here” dancing on a dime, / hearing mother cry / maybe she’s around the corner got a crack in / got a crack in some strange places / on my back with / on my back with some dirty dishes falling down, falling down / all over the river / falling down, falling down / falling down… wish what i’m feeling could / go on like this forever / falling down, falling down / falling down… and since we’re down / might as well stay / might as well fry some eggs / and wave to the shade of the peppermint tray / she’s a new friend not a skeleton / to ride into town / knowing what they’ll say / knowing she tastes like a hamburger maid, but / “these dead petals, honey, brought me here” / she said, “these dead petals, honey, brought me here” © Sword & Stone

  • Honey Bee making a beeline for one of my orange Oriental Poppies. Canon EOS 5D MkII with Canon EF Macro 100mm f/2.8

  • Was actually taking a picture of the Zucchini Flower and didn’t notice this little chap- well I wouldn’t as it was covered from head to sting in Pollen- having the time of its little life in there!!! Taken with a Fuji A600 Finepix Camera and Used SC and cropped in free download of Picasa 3 Featured in Image Writing – July 2009 / Featured in Plight Of The Bumble Bee- July 2009 / Featured in ‘Extreme Close-Ups – August 2009 / Featured in ‘Alphabet Soup’ – July 2009 / Sale of a Mounted Print to Clive- October 2009 / Sale of a Card – October 2009 / Featured in ‘The World and How We See It’ – November 2009

  • Nikon D40 with 18-5mm GII lens / 55mm ~ 1/250’s ~ f / 8 ~ ISO=200 / Tripod / ________ / ________ / ________

  • The bell-shaped flowers of Nectaroscordum siculum / also known as Allium bulgaricum, Allium sicilum – Sicilian honey garlic. I took this photograph in 2007 and was lucky to have it placed 1st in the plant portrait category of the RHS photographic competition 2007. I thought I would share it with you as it seemed to sum up the weather we are having in England, wet, wet, wet! Nikon D200, Nikkor 105 micro VR, F/11.0, 1/200, ISO 320, Aperture priority, Hand held, available light.

  • Nikon D40 with 18-55mm GII lens / 55mm ~ 1/320’s ~ f / 9 ~ ISO=200 / Hand Held / Auto Focus / RAW / Processed in Nikon Capture NX 2 software / _______ TOP TEN FINISH / CHALLENGE ~ / Show Your Favorite Subject To Photograph / FOCUS and LIGHTING GROUP / 10/23/2009 / _______ TOP TEN FINISH / CHALLENGE – DISCOVER NEW WORLDS ~ MACRO / MOOD & AMBIENCE GROUP / 09/21/2009 / ________ / / 09/14/2009 / ________ / 09/06/2009 / ________ / ________ / ________

  • A little Australian Native Stingless Bee (Trigona carbonaria), cleaning her long proboscis (a complex “tongue”), used to suck the nectar from flowers. These little bees are harmless to humans, which is a good thing, as to get this shot, at 5x, I had to put the lens right in her face.. Hehe! Shot in the Noosa National Park, Noosa Heads, Queensland, Australia. Flower is a native wildflower to the sandy areas, not sure of the name unfortunately. Canon 5D Mk II, 65mm, 5x. Available Large, and best appreciated Large!

  • Captured on 10/22/09 just before the sun set…..the only editing was to tone down the contrast…..enjoy and please view in large format…. This image is copyright protected and registered; please respect copyrights:MCN: CAHCH-57PW3-A9BWV / / /

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 317,900 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Flower Honey T-Shirts

Flower Honey Wall Art

Flower Honey Journal Entries

Flower Honey Writing

Flower Honey Calendars