Snow geese trio in Missouri.
Was able to catch this fella taking a mud bath. I have posted a black & white version of this same photo.
Female mandarine duck landing on a pond, Bushy Park, London
outside of the illusion she lives… / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations this was a different kind of dream… it was a trip… / where did she go? / she came back telling many stories of people and places… / she came back like a newly born baby… / she came back to me… / ... to her new life. (drawing made of my daughter’s face when she was in comma, in the hospital. all i had was time to be by her side, so i made many sketches and this one i edited in photoshop)
from Brasil, the inspiration for this little indian girl… young, yet a warrior / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations um índio – caetano veloso
Full colors… inside and out / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations sp – digital collage with photo, drawings, sketches and illustrations manipulated with filters in photoshop cs2.
Soulmates series / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations
Soul mates series / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations
http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations / pencil drawing scanned and edited (digital collage, digital painting, filters and effects) in photoshop cs2. this piece was inspired in the mail between a man and a woman and specially in the letter she sent back to him, burning in passion, in reply to his letter to her, in which he proposes to her and writes about his love. / it’s a letter full of love, devotion, passion and desire and it can be partially seen in the art a thousand kisses deep
... flying with new wings / http://www.zazzle.com/andreacreations
“New Growth New Hope” Photography & Artwork / by Holly Kempe © A surreal depicition of two larger trees bending over a smaller one and protecting it whilst silhouetted against the rising of a full moon. “Young one you know how I’m older than thee?” / said the largest of the trees, / “Another is growing smaller than you / and we must tell it the best thing to do” / “I know, I know”, said the younger tree, / “To grow as tall as the moon. Will it be sibling to me?” / ‘Yes it shall, it will grow by and by.” / And the trees stood and watched / the new reach for the sky…....” Author: adgray / See the rest of adgray’s writing inspired by / New Growth New Hope here. New Growth New Hope was featured in the: Shoot the Moon Group – April 09
of my inner geisha
... or when the moon bleeds.
“everything is mostly vast amounts of space between itself my love…...” Gallo, you told me that… and everything came clear… so clear… and even more complex now…. and then, “fluid dynamics”, you said… among all the significant words on that message, those two words brought my childhood back and my obsession for the infinite micro/macro… and you brought light into it. / You are the greatest inspiration for my creations, but this one, derived from that dream, is more than inspiration, it is a deep communion and I dedicate it to you, my soul mate. / / / i am so honored to have been featured in the EMI Magazine! Mark, that was a rabbit punch! thank you and to the EMI great crew!!! / i am thrilled to have this piece featured in Abstract Realism. this one is deeply special to me. / thank you!
The same to ducks landing on the other side of the lagoon. Whichi is behind my house in Oak Forest, IL.
A Seagull comes in for a landing along a stream shoreline, to feast on the lifeless bodies of spawned out Chum Salmon. / / The Glaucous-Winged Gull is a large gull of the north Pacific Coast and it is common in coastal cities and towns. Its wingtips are colored unlike any other gull’s, being neither black nor white. Instead, they are a medium gray, not much different from the back color. The Glaucous-winged Gull hybridizes extensively with the Western Gull, with the hybrids being the most common form in Washington. The hybrids can be similar to the parent adult forms, but usually have intermediate back and wingtip coloring. With the medium-gray back, dark upper surface to wingtips, frosty white undersurface to wingtips and a darkish eye, a hybrid may closely resemble a robust Thayer’s Gull. The flatter and larger head of the hybrid, and especially the thick bill with a pronounced angle on the bottom, should help distinguish it from the smaller, slimmer Thayer’s Gull. / Size: 50-59 cm (20-23 in) / Wingspan: 120-143 cm (47-56 in) / Weight: 900-1200 g (31.77-42.36 ounces) / Head and underparts white. / Back silvery gray. / Wingtips medium gray with white spots near tip. / Legs pinkish. / Breeding (Alternate) Plumage: Bill yellow with red spot near tip of lower mandible. Wing tips medium gray, only slightly darker than back. Eyes dark brown to dirty yellow. Thin ring of skin around eyes pinkish. Pronounced angle on lower edge of bill (gonys). / Sexes alike in plumage, male larger than female. Juvenal plumage: Light grayish brown head and body, back, tail, and wings. Flight feathers on wing same color as back. Bill black. Legs dark gray with pink overtones. Eyes dark brown to black. / First Winter (Basic I): Like juvenal, but head, throat, and breast lighter and more streaked. Bill black. Eyes dark brown. / First Summer (Alternate I): Head, neck, and especially the throat whiter, but still streaked. Wing feathers worn and paler. Mix of clean gray and mottled feathers on back. Bill black. Eyes dark brown. / Second Winter (Basic II): Head whiter, but neck heavily streaked. Back mottled brownish and light gray. Underparts white. Wing tips light gray, like back. Tail gray. Bill pale flesh at base, then black. Eyes dark brown. Legs dirty pink. / Second Summer (Alternate II): Head and neck largely white with conspicuous streaking. Back may be entirely light gray with a few brownish feathers. Underparts mostly white. Bill yellowish at base, then black with white tip. Eyes dark brown. / Third Winter (Basic III): Some dirty brown on otherwise white neck and head. Back light gray with only a few dull brownish feathers. Underparts white. Tail largely white with some dark smudging. Outer wing feathers (primaries) darker gray with white tips. Inner wing feathers (secondaries) light gray with broad white tips. Bill yellowish at base, then black with white tip. Eyes brown. Legs dirty pink. / Third Summer (Alternate III): Head and neck pure white or with only little streaking. Back all gray. Underparts white. Tail white with some dark smudging. Bill yellow with some red on lower mandible. Eyes brown.
© Deb Larson Camera: Sony A900; F-Stop: f/4.5; Exposure: 1/400 sec.; ISO Speed: 200; Focal Length: 200mm. Mature Bald Eagle taken in the wild off Homer Spit, Homer, Alaska.
12X19 original art print a.p. signature landscape with wildlife
:) / / /
Sorry to bore you all with another shot of the baby fox Luna, but she is just too cute! What a poser, eh???!! ;o) Canon EOS 5D MkII with Canon EF 70-200mm L f/4
CAPTURED THESE BALD EAGLES REBUILDING THEIR NEST IN THE NORTH SAVANNAS ENDANGERED LAND FT PIERCE FLORIDA. CAMERA MY CANON REBEL XSI LENSE SIGMA 150 TO 500 MM ISO 1600 SPEED 1/800 AT F 13.0 FOCAL LENGTH 500MM
Focused on the landing – American Bald Eagle Nikon D90 / Nikkor 70-300 mm lens
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