Guy man 

695 creative works found

  • Self-Portrait.

  • Made this shirt in honor of my dad.

  • Are you also a classical guy?

  • Hehe i love this and am hoping to do more in this style soon.

  • Pen and marker on Canson illustration paper / Also available on a t-shirt / This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.5 Australia License

  • A mini shoot i did with my brother, i really like this one, he looks like he is deep in though, even though he probably was just bored of me shooting him…hehe

  • Oil on canvas. / 18×12.5 cm

  • Would you like to know how I made this image? Advanced HDR Techniques Suburban Scenes by Mike Savad Squidoo Lenses

  • Original acrylic painting 24” x 36”

  • This is for my weather project, representing….rain! Hehe. This was quite fun. / I miss you so much, I miss your touch / And the way you hate me / And the calloused skin is wearing thin / And now I can’t breathe / After all I’ve said you should understand / After all I’ve said you should understand / It’s the wait that kills me

  • Featured in Shameless Self-Promotion

  • This photo was taken at Tombstone, Arizona’s Wyatt Earp Days. There were costumed characters everywhere. Their costumes were judged on adherence to authenticity. Skits by acting groups were also judged. Photographed with a Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ 28. “The Town Too Tough to Die,” Tombstone was perhaps the most renowned of Arizona’s old mining camps. When Ed Schieffelin (SHEF·e·lin) came to Camp Huachuca (hwah·CHEW·kuh) with a party of soldiers and left the fort to prospect, his comrades told him that he’d find his tombstone rather than silver. Thus, in 1877 Schieffelin named his first claim the Tombstone, and rumors of rich strikes made a boomtown of the settlement that adopted this name. During World War I, Tombstone was a major producer of manganese for the government. In World War II, Tombstone was extracting lead for the cause. After both conflicts, Tombstone faded into obscurity, just to be resurrected at a later time. The citizenry of Tombstone decided rather than depending on a vanishing mining industry, they would focus their time and energy on tourism and restoration. Good call! Many of Tombstone’s historic buildings are within an area bounded by Fremont, 6th, Toughnut and 3rd streets. Among them are St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, built in 1882; the Crystal Palace Saloon, one of the most luxurious saloons in the West; and the Tombstone Epitaph building, where the oldest continuously published paper in Arizona is still being printed. Western printing history exhibits in the front office are free to the public. Truly a Historical American Landmark, Tombstone is America’s best example of our 1880 western heritage, which is well preserved with original 1880’s buildings and artifacts featured in numerous museums. Check out my other portraits / “El Hombre” was featured in DIMENSIONS/July, 2009 / “Blue Bandana” / “Sombrero” / “Wyatt Earp” /

  • to be serious…..LOL….and failing miserably…..This is what the scene is mostly like when I force him to pose for me or with me.

  • 12-Oct-2009 Featured in Dimensions group 31-Dec-2009 Top Ten image in People around Italy challenge (Italy and all Things Italian group) 31-Dec-2009 = 188 views Camera: SONY DSC-F828 Lens: Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* 28-200 mm (2-2,8/7.1-51) Date: 06-Mar-2009 Location: Venice, Italy Copyright © Nedim Bosnic 2009 / Email: nedim.bosnic@gmail.com My ’’English language instructor’’ Rosie helped me to write this short comment. Thank you my dear friend for your generous help. On March 6th 2009 I visited Venice for a day-trip with friends. While walking around, shopping souvenirs and so on, we passed this small canal bridge, and I noticed this guy who was in this exact position pictured here. He was cool when I turned back to ask him, pointing at my camera ’’ can I ? ’’, just nodding his head, then resuming his original position as shown, gazing into some distant place….This was my spontaneous meeting with a Venetian Gondolier, and resulted in this shot, which I would not consider a posed shot, as this is this fellow’s natural demeanor, this is him in his natural state. Some of my other shots have been posed, but this is not one of them. It was pure life. And it was my first visit to Venice.

  • oil on canvas 36” x 36”

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