Mohawk
1 member found
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Sean Limbert
United Kingdom
118 creative works found
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He said, “Kanyen’keha Tewatati” (Let’s speak Mohawk).
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3 cute little jelli-punks dancing across your shirt. if you think they look cute in 2D you should check out my handmade 3D soft toy versions at http;//jellibat.etsy.com
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photomanipulation made to look like an oil painting. / original stock http://nothingreal0.deviantart.com/
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This design is in honor of my flawless little brother, who, when he was 15, finally got into trouble because he and some friends went around stealing pink flamingos out of the neighbor’s yards. He got caught and I have never let him live it down. This is for you, Robbie!
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whats funny to me about this photo is that I had a fairly decent camera, canon something, roughly 300 dollars US, had it three years and never used it. Bob was the first thing I decided to shoot (this was 2002). I had no idea what I was doing, I couldn’t focus well, I didn’t know what apature was, and yet, this is one of my favorite photos Ive ever taken. / I had a great deal more photographs of this set-up, but they were developed and the negatives have been gone for years, and the proofs themselves, they probably disappeared around the few years where I had 4-5 roommates at a time. I’m glad he didn’t pose for me while we did this, I think it wouldn’t have turned out as well if he did.
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A few weekends ago I went along to the Back Alley Atelier exhibition at the Brunswick Street Gallery. My favourite piece (it was difficult, there was so much amazing work!) was this one by Chris W , ‘A Spartan Future’: / / / / It was spiky, shiny and mask-y, so I was inspired to create a beastly version…watercolour, pen, chalk pastel, silver leaf on canvas. He is 31×31cm. / / I’d like to invite speculation as the to purpose of the eye-piece. Telescope? Night vision? Infra-red? Maybe some kind of cool kaleidoscope thing. / / / / This angle shows the silver leaf parts: /
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It no longer matters what ‘era’ you are from. Today…it is a digital era. / Embrace it, make it your friend, accept digital. It’s here to stay.
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One of the statues in front of the St. Francis Cathedral in Santa Fe, NM that caught my eye. If interested…here’s the information on this Native American tribute statue: Bronze Statue of Indian Woman in Front of Santa Fe’s St. Francis Cathedral – Who is She? / —by Elizabeth Mitchell at About.com Who is the Indian woman depicted in a beautiful bronze in front of Santa Fe’s St. Francis of Assissi Cathedral? I was drawn to this statue of a magical and beautiful woman, adorned with turquoise jewelry, holding eagle feathers. She is named Kateri Tekakwitha. She is also known as Lily of the Mohawks and joined the well-known statue of Archbishop Jean Baptiste Lamy in front of Santa Fe’s St. Francis Cathedral in 2002. Santa Fe’s Archbishop commissioned a statue of Kateri Tekakwitha to honor the Native American spirit. A painting of Tekakwitha also joins a number of other saints on the church’s altar screen. Tekakwitha’s father was a Mohawk chief and her mother was a Catholic Algonquin. Tekakwitha, born in 1656, was brought up in the Mohawk community of Ossernenon, now Auriesville, N.Y. A part of the turtle clan, she was orphaned at age 4 when both parents and a brother died in a small pox epidemic. The disease affected her eyesight and her health. Her name, Tekakwitha, means “putting things in order.” A Saintly Life and a Miracle Observed According to a website devoted to stories and the history of Tekakwitha, she was baptized in 1676, when she was 20 and died four years later. It was her Christian Algonquin mother who instilled in her daughter her Christianity, her Catholicism. Tradition has it that Father Pierre Cholenec, a witness at her deathbed, states that at the time of her death Kateri’s face ”... so disfigured and so swarthy in life, suddenly changed about fifteen minutes after her death, and in an instant became so beautiful and so fair that just as soon as I saw it (I was praying by her side) I let out a yell, I was so astonished, and I sent for the priest who was working at the repository for the Holy Thursday service. At the news of this prodigy, he came running along with some people who were with him.” After her death, Tekakwitha became known as the Lily of the Mohawks.
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Captured this image of this elderly gentleman, and wonder about the stories of life experiences he could tell. HDR Images / Prague Images / Aviation Related Images
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my newest drawing for one of my many stories =]... the mohawk teddies have come a looooong way in the designing department =)...
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Chatuchak Market – Bangkok
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I’m currently reading ‘Monster blood tattoo – book 2: lamplighter” by D.M. Cornish and the author has included their drawing of the characters in every five pages or so with these boarders. Its that sketchy kind of thing that makes me want to draw. so I found this stock image / and here’s the result! :D
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Ink splatter-like graphic of a punk girl
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candid of spectator at bike race in Harlem, NYC June 2008 / MCN: CAAB4-56066-59243
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She is a little to smart and a little spooky.
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Lisa C. Weber ©2007 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!
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This guy just stepped out of the local pub (bar / hotel) for a cigarette break from work. I asked to take a few shots and he happily obliged (Australian federal election night Nov 2007 and I think Austrailia was in one of those warm feel good moods). Newtown in Sydney.
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Lisa C. Weber ©2008 / Visit My Complete RedBubble for all My 3D Artwork & Products
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Pencil on slightly yellowing paper. Some corrections and post processing in Photoshop.
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unless I do something different, it will always be the same. / . / Here is something graphic. / . / simple. / . / Now for O’s story. Well this is of course, “O Yes”. Officially. Everyone calls it ‘O Yeah’. ‘O Yes’ is for documents but doesn’t actually answer to it. Even teachers at school use it. / . / Ally Mc Beal references everyone having a songs, a tune you get your groove to. O Yeah listens to Ska music of course, rides a moped and has tattoos like you wouldn’t believe / . / I know, I know, it’s so clean and undecorated here. roll up it’s sleeves, and there has been loads of work done. that’s why I like O. Business and brains by day, rock n roll singer by night. / . / I’ve gone to see them play, actually, and I was surprised. there were loads of wild hairdos; spiked mohawks, piercings and clomping boots: surely I’d get squashed in that rough crowd, me with my new agey kind of sweet home girl clothes- not so. They were welcoming, into dancing and so mellow. I recommend O, and it’s crowd. They are lovely. / . / sunset
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The Zenoidan scouts, proficient in telepathy with other creatures, often form lifelong bonds with the intelligent and gentle Hasinîn horses. Together they patrol the barren wastelands surrounding the more fertile regions of Zenoidia, and protect the homesteads from incursion by the bloodthirsty nomadic tribes. Background rendered in Vue 6 Esprit. Characters and final render in Poser. This was a proof of concept for me. I bought rDNA’s “Infinity Cove” Poser tool and wanted to see if I could generate my own backdrops for it. Looks like I can. Next time I’ll do a more complicated scene. Also using a great freebie from rDNA : the Raven Mohawk hair. Clothing and horse textures from Poserworld. The double-bladed staff is a modified free light-saber from Vacasoft
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