Fold 

591 creative works found

  • What is love? Butterflies in your tummy? / Blushes on your cheeks? / Adoration in your eyes? / Hurt in your heart? Warm hugs? / Passionate kisses? / Cold tears? / Sad cries? Are they love? / Or none of them called love? What is love? / Describe me love..

  • Among the most beloved Christian symbols is the sheep. This lovely ewe followed me around the farmyard and seemed to be asking me, “Who are you?” I decided to take her lovely inquisitive face and make it into an Easter card. May the joy of the Resurrection be yours as you follow the Good Shepherd with trust and confidence!

  • Folds of Elegance is a sepia tone photograph of a delicate flower, a macro shot taken in late spring of 2007.

  • Simple Dichotomy Again my love / you have now found / a double love in which to drown / The skyward and the earthward bound That is not to say / that either two / the earthy or the cloudy vision / are favoured with what they see in you / or either seen with derision (you play with each as each does wonder) No more is like / In difference are respect in truth / combined in joy is what you seek / although a comfort and complete / these are not the early passions of your youth (when hearts broke and burst asunder) Alas comparisons you cannot make / in between what you have found / You love each for its own sake / Both in the air or in the ground (and yet you see you are you afraid) but distant dreams you cannot have / the sky games you play less blame / are safe because they are just that / nothing more or less than game (as in your own words you say) whereas the earth on which you stand / Is closer if not less grand / you can have both is what you feel / to be grounded or in the sky less real. (be wary of where your passions lay) / Ken Simm

  • Synonymous with Scotland, the Highland Cow, or Hielan Coo as we would say, can be seen all over the country. Highland cattle (also known as Hairy Coo or Hielan Coo) are an ancient Scottish breed of beef cattle with long outward spreading horns and long wavy pelts coloured black, brindled, red, yellow, or dun. The breed was developed in the Scottish Highlands and western coastal regions of Scotland, and breeding stock has been exported to the rest of the world, especially Australia and North America, since the 1900s and is used as grazer in nature reserves in the Netherlands . The breed was developed from two sets of stock, one originally black, and the other reddish. Today, Highland cattle come in a wide variety of colours. Highlands are known as a hardy breed due to the rugged nature of their native Scottish Highlands, with high rainfall and strong winds. They both graze and browse and eat plants other cattle avoid. The meat tends to be leaner than most beef, as highlands get most of their insulation from their thick shaggy hair rather than subcutaneous fat. The coat also makes them a good breed for cold Northern climates. The Highland cattle registry (“herd book”) was established in 1885. Although groups of cattle are generally called herds, a group of highlands is known as a ‘fold’. The breed is affectionately known as “shaggy coos” or “hairy coos” in parts of Scotland. They were also known as ‘kyloes’ in Scots. Highland cattle have been successfully established in many European countries. Their hair provides protection during the cold winters, and their skill in browsing for food is also important in order to survive in such a steep mountain area. BEST VIEWED LARGER Related shots can be found at: Highland Scotland. / Click on the card below to see the pcture and information. /

  • Digital image in intense shades of yellow and orange, which looks like folds in a giant cloth. I think of it as the fabric of the human spirit. Image c Lynda Lehmann.

  • the folds / and rim / a butter cream flow / of sensuality… who ever thought / the underlining of a mushroom / could provide such a feeling… / or is just me? :) xx

  • A Banana leaf unfolding….... / Copyright Notice: / All images are the property of ©Leah Highland and may not be used wholly or in part without the prior written permission by email, including copying, duplicating, manipulating, printing, / publishing (even on a web site), reproducing, storing, or transmitting by any means.

  • Another sheet of paper, more cuts and folds and viola’! / / / / / / Featured in the Featuring the Shadows group on 5 October 2008.

  • / If you prefer an unframed version, feel free to contact me / leahhighland@gmail.com / Copyright Notice: / All images are the property of ©Leah Highland and may not be used wholly or in part without the prior written permission by email, including copying, duplicating, manipulating, printing, / publishing (even on a web site), reproducing, storing, or transmitting by any means.

  • A tiny marigold bud against a blue background… I love the folds the petals make when they’re about to open.

  • Folds in a maple leaf. Taken with a Fuji Finepix S5700. Featured in Amateur Art Photography, February 2009. For my other leaf images, please click here

  • This one is a bit harder than the others, because there are more folds. See if you can make an origami toad. If you make the design, please send me a bubblemail and let me see it. i will try and put it on this page. Have fun.

  • This little Japanese Origami Panda is cute, and easy to fold. Have fun!

  • A golden hibiscus.

  • My origami calendar I tried to fold a crane out of gummy candy, which came out far less successful than the candy wrapper folded crane. First I had to take a slice of gummy thin enough to fold, but not too thin that it would be too delicate to fold with; or stick to one another too easily while folding; hence getting ruined. Secondly the folding process could not be done continuously; I had to leave time between some folds to let it dry before proceeding, otherwise the gummy is just too sticky to work with. Third, the completed crane had the tendency to want to unfold and shrink, hence the stubbiness. This also made photo shooting difficult; I had to try to take the picture before the crane unfolded or contracted any further; the parts needed some pinching and stretching before the picture was taken. I was debating on whether to upload this or not, but hey it atleast kinda recognizable as a crane… well I liked the title :P This work has been featured in / Little Things To Make You Smile / The Sculptinators / Macro Untouched More Sample Origami:

  • My origami calendar / / Ever since I saw mobii’s Origami Penguin Tee shirt, I’ve wanted to give it a go myself. The problem was I was too busy at the time, and I could not think of a creative scenario for it. I finally thought of one, and started folding from a 7×7mm piece of paper using tweezers, but by the time I was finished, I realized it was too tiny to create the scenario I wanted :P. I’m going to do bigger one later. I’ve decided to show this one anyways because I think it’s cute. It’s just taken in my hand hand; nothing new, but in black and white the lines in my hand looks like a snowstorm Taken with an Olympus FE-340. For a better idea of scale: / and here is the bigger one:

  • Remember the old bridge table and folding chairs…...... / I saved the chairs from my parents old set…........ / The leather backs and seats were in need of repair so…............ / I re-covered them with canvas and painted them…......... / Bringing my Island with me to the desert…...... / / /

  • Remember the old bridge table and folding chairs…...... / I saved the chairs from my parents old set…........ / The leather backs and seats were in need of repair so…............ / I re-covered them with canvas and painted them…......... / Bringing my Island with me to the desert…...... / / /

  • Taken in Mungo National Park – NSW – Australia. Took the long drive up to Mildura in the northern part of Victoria for my cousins engagement party and thought that I would also take the opportunity to drive out to Lake Mungo, where stand the “Walls of China”. Ancient clay formations from a time when the climate in the sub-desert region was substantially wetter. Within the clays lie fossil remains which achaeoligist say are the remains of some of the earliest settlers in Australia. The drive is relatively short from Mildura, about 1.5hrs. But most of the drive is on unsealed and corrugated roads, unaccessable when wet. If you get the chance to go, make sure you tell someone your plans and take plenty of water as temperatures in summer exceed 40C (104F). There is no mobile phone coverage and very little water. Focal length: 11mm / Exposure: 10sec / ISO: 100 / Lens: Tokina 11-16mm

  • This is the same folded rose in my Fading Taken with an Olympus FE-340 on Oct 22, 2009. I put a weak flashlight underneath it; and had another weak flashlight shining one it. I took the photo into photoshop and did a bit of adjustment for a glassier effect. This work has been featured in: / ~Still Life Photography

  • When I was a child, I went to the fabric store with my mother. I loved going through the fabrics and looking at each fabric and pattern I saw. I loved the rich elegance of satin and silks. The wonderful brocaded patterns that seemed to dance. If I was lucky, sometimes that particular piece would be my next outfit. Trimmed in faux fur or velvet. :o) Created in Fractal Explorer. Postwork in Photoshop for saturation, hue and contrasts. Featured in: / Pick of the Week in, A Fractal Energy Passion Dec 2009 / A Fractal Energy Passion Dec 2009

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