Icing white Wall Art

2011 creative works found

  • A digital image with an interest in the times when we find ourselves alone in life.

  • Female dancer inside a cocktail glass.

  • WILD & FREE / / The Antarctic Peninsula is a very remote a special place with an abundance of amazing thing to see and photograph. / This Adelie penguin was trying to have a quick nap before he went out fishing again! / / (Half Moon Island – Antarctic Peninsula) / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • Rockhopper Penguin / / (Falkland islands) / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • Another stone. Another wall… / Another pill. They said I’d be ok. / They said I’d see again..hear again..feel again. / I wanted to believe.. / Another day. Loneliness. Erase the year.. / Again..I’m here. They told me to be a wall. / Told me to be lonely. I didn’t believe them. / So instead, I loved. Now.. / I am free..

  • WILD & FREE / / This King Penguin had found a nice vantage point to survey his kingdom! / / (South Georgia – Antarctic trip) / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • Polar Bear mum and her two cubs cuddle up together. I think one of the cubs has a cold nose! / / (Spitzbergen – Scandinavian Arctic) / / >< / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of Chinstrap Penguin taken on Penguin Island, Antartic Peninsula. Pack ice had broken enough to allow a landing via zodiacs. A wonderful little island with a large chinstrap colony that also contained a few Adelie Penguins. There were also nesting Giant Petrels, Skuas, Weddell Seals and a Leapold Seal in the water just off the landing area.

  • This is the view of my neighbors property. I happened to look over as I drove out of their driveway and saw this view of the on coming storm….wow! I had to stop and take some shots. Hope it effects you as it did me when I saw it. This image was featured in the “Everything Winter” group, Jan 09. Thank you all so very much. I appreciate it loads!! / / / /

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Our ship, “Polar Pioneer”, dwarfed by the huge glacier in Neko Harbour, Antarctic Peninsula.

  • mixed media painting on canvas

  • A photograph…....... It’s a Fairy Tale…...............She’s lost in the Ice Forrest, hiding from the evil Queen but no worries, she locks the mean old Queen up and throws away the key…...............the Prince? hmmm oh ! she kicked him to the curb and lived happily ever after ;) he he he

  • Near the top of Chamonix Mont Blanc in March 2008

  • WILD & FREE / / Polar bear cubs having a short rest on an ice floe. The sea ice is shrinking at an alarming rate, which has a huge impact for the bears as this is their main hunting ground. More and more bears are being found to have drowned while trying to find the ice, even though they can swim up to sixty miles or so! / / I hope the ice does not completely vanish and that they always have somewhere to hut! (Spitsbergen – Scandinavian Arctic) / /

  • Apophysis to Photoshop using wacam pen and pad. Well it is snowing in the cascades at 4000 feet. The skiers are stoked its gonna snow alot this week. I like the ponds that ice over the reflections are like a reversed universe meeting in the cold. /

  • WILD & FREE / / We were so lucky to spend hours with this mum and cubs as they moved around the ice flows. These cubs were around seven months old and full of joy – although they did not seem all that keen to keep up with mum. / / The sea ice is shrinking at an alarming rate, which has a huge impact for the bears as this is their main hunting ground. More and more bears are being found to have drowned while trying to find the ice, even though they can swim up to sixty miles or so! / / I hope the ice does not completely vanish and that they always have somewhere to hut! (Spitsbergen – Scandinavian Arctic) / /

  • WILD & FREE / / Polar bear mum and her two cubs as they enter the icy cold water. This was really great to see, although the light was starting to go as the fog came in, but still very special! / / The sea ice is shrinking at an alarming rate, which has a huge impact for the bears as this is their main hunting ground. More and more bears are being found to have drowned while trying to find the ice, even though they can swim up to sixty miles or so! / / I hope the ice does not completely vanish and that they always have somewhere to hut! (Spitsbergen – Scandinavian Arctic) / /

  • ALL PROCEEDS FROM THIS ARTWORK WILL BE DONATED TO THE PHILADELPHIA MISSION LINK

  • From my collection: / Emerquinox / Spirit of Alaska ~ Alaska North Star Winter Scenics Copyright © Sharon Mau 2009 / All Rights Reserved Emerquinox is a word I coined when I combined the words Emerge and Equinox The Great White North I took this photo in deep winter 20 January 2008 midway between Fairbanks and North Pole Alaska. In summer this area is a peat bog. It is actually quite deep as in late Autumn I have watched a cow Moose submerge herself and swim in the pond at sunset. Near the Chena River, in winter it is used as a ‘highway’ for mushers and their dogsleds and also for snowmachines. I removed the natural blue hue with a white balance adjustment. Then I desaturated selective colours pulling down the yellow, magenta, and green. With a slight adjustment on contrast, I then used the lasso tool and selected only the sky to remove the digital noise as I had my ISO setting too high at 400 and, along with the cold, this created too much noise with the original photograph. The temperature on this day had actually warmed to about 10F. Within a week it plunged again to appx minus -47F. Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi / Shooting Date/Time 20 January 2008 16:41:50 / Tv( Shutter Speed ) 1/125 / Av( Aperture Value ) 5.6 “Permafrost, perennially frozen ground that maintains a temperature at or below the freezing point for at least two years. Vast tracts of permafrost lie across Alaska, Canada, northern Europe and Asia, and Antarctica. About 80 percent of Alaska’s land area contains permafrost. In the Interior region, vegetation must adapt itself to short, warm summers and long, cold winters. Trees grow slowly, and their root systems must be shallow because they cannot penetrate the permafrost. In Alaska, permafrost occurs as a continuous sheet north of the Brooks Range, extending from a few inches below the surface down to as deep as 1,000 feet. As one goes south, however, it gets progressively thinner, the melted layer on top gets thicker, and holes or gaps begin to appear in it. Permafrost may extend to depths of more than 500 m (1,600 ft). Clues to the age of the permafrost of the Northern Hemisphere lie in the numerous discoveries of mammoth remains embedded in frozen ground. Mammoths became extinct about 10,000 to 15,000 years ago, coincident with the end of the most recent ice age. Some scientists, however, think that much of today’s permafrost may have formed as long as 120,000 years ago.” Source: Wikipedia “As with all great journeys, the vision is the beginning / Dreams of all the possibilities, / of the many paths widening to the future / Of all the great and extraordinary things our mind can imagine / The persistence of our own opportunistic souls reaching for what is yet unabridged / An unconscious decision to struggle forward yet again / And without even knowing of our focus / We start forward / All of our past, our teachings, our experience are brought into play / The trials of our past giving us the tools that we need to find our way / Our way to fulfilling this newest quest for our dream / No obstacle too great, / no argument rebuff / The journey begun, we will not allow defeat / We can only see the unfolding, as it will be / And as always, / the goal is reached / And there, / sated in the peace of our newly added thread in the web of our life / We rest / And the vision comes again” / ~ by Steve ‘Easy’ Whitacre 2005

  • Feature Image – AMERICA’s National Parks and WILDLIFE Habitat Group / Feature Image – America’s Natural Wonders Group / Lower Yellowstone Falls is a spectacular waterfall that drops 308 feet. It is located along the Yellowstone River below canyon Lodge and is easily viewed from both sides of the canyon by road and by hiking all along Uncle Tom’s Trail. I was in total awe when after trudging through a very slippery ice track I then came face to face with this amazing vista. It really blew me away. . From a day in Yellowstone National Park USA April 2008 Nikon D40x / Nikkor 55-200mm

  • 100% of proceeds received from Redbubble in respect to sales of this item, will be donated to Bush Heritage Australia Photo of a little Chinstrap Penguin having a sleep while standing up. Taken on Penguin Island, Antarctic Peninsula.

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