Myrtle 

1 member found

357 creative works found

  • A Myrtle Beach postcard I made. / These are my own pictures I took while I was down there in July. / This came out beautiful, I bought it off of this website.

  • Concept image of romance on Myrtle Beach SC at sunrise!!!!

  • Here is another angle of April Morning Sunrise

  • Sunrise in Myrtle Beach, SC

  • Sunrise in Myrtle Beach, SC. / This is the same image as Myrtle Beach Sunrise but the color has been enhanced a bit in PSE6 in this one. / /

  • Unfortunately this is one of the areas that was affected by “Black Saturday”, I am so hoping that this little pocket of Myrlte beech forest wasnt touched by the fires. There were fires in the Blue Range, Marysville National park. The Myrtle beech trees have been around since the Jurassic period. I stood in the river with my jeans rolled up to my knees, the water had slowed nearly to a stillness as it gathered around the rocks in the water that were covered with moss, as I hit the timer button on my camera in that 10 seconds I had time to reflect on the raw beauty of this ancient forest. The forest that stood before me was thousands of years old. It was summer out beyond these beautiful old trees it was a stinking hot day, the flies stuck to my body, I found relief in the river and under the ancient old tree. Under the ancient trees it was freezing, for some strange reason it was like the middle of winter under the trees and my feet and legs were numb from the icy water that I stood in. This artwork has been featured in Yarra Valley and ranges Group and also in Crossing Streams Group. Featured in the group “Stream Crossings” Featured in the group “Yarra Valley and ranges “feelitcomp” Stillness speaks 1 Mat print sold of this artwork so far. 3 Cards sold of this artwork so far. Any sales from this artwork will be going to the Phoenix Appeal for the “Black Saturday Fires”.

  • the tree in this photo may be as old as 400 to 500 hundred years it is a myrtile beech

  • Hand drawn from a doodle in pencil

  • Giant old Myrtle Beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii) covered in moss and epiphytic ferns in Cool Temperate Rainforest, Great Otway National Park, Victoria. / Rollieflex SL66, Fuji RDP film. / © Ern Mainka

  • Small blue fungus amongst the unmistakable shape of Myrtle leaves in a typical Tasmanian rainforest. / The first time you see these fungus, you assume they cannot be real. Their amazing colour does make them unique and attractive. / A particularly impressive example, I decided rather than interfere, to leave the small speck of dirt / debris on the front one, keeping it real as I like to do. / It could easily be cloned out if that’s your preference. Dimensions: 3872×2592 pixels. How much detail is there in my images? / This image has an example If you like this, you’ll probably like / my other images.

  • Taken in the Tarkine forest, Australia’s largest temprate rainforest. Subject to logging.

  • Divine Prayer was featured in the Amazing Graves group on January 29, 2009. An infrared image taken at historic Myrtle Hill Cemetery, which overlooks downtown Rome, Georgia. The early citizens of Rome chose hills for cemeteries because of the flooding of Rome’s three rivers. Opened in 1857, this hillside cemetery covers 25 acres built on 5 terraces and is individually listed on the National Register of Historic Places. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Please don’t copy or download this image. My photos may NOT be reproduced and/or used in any form without my written permission. If you want this photograph, I would be honored for you to purchase it. ©2008-2009 Patricia Montgomery | Bucks Mountain Galleries | All rights reserved.

  • I was surprised to watch this yellow rumped warbler as it guarded its stash at the suet log. Much like the hummingbird which is combative and territorial, this little warbler was a feisty combatant to other birds that tried to grab a bit of peanut from the feeders. Like all warblers, this little songbird has a melodious voice that fills the air. I believe this is what is called the “Myrtle form” of the yellow-rumped warbler).

  • Myrtle rocks, Powell River BC Feature in Nirvana Group / Top ten in Pacific Northwest Group challenge Olympus Ssp510uz

  • The Sassafras tree is growing on the Myrtle tree. Like most rain-forest trees in Tasmania, they can live off each other without destroying themselves. When a tree falls over or dies, often another one will take up the nutrient and continue to grow in this amazing environment. / I have altered the image only slightly to show the support I have for these trees. They are to me (the woman and a girl in the background) me and my daughter Zoe. / I have wanted to animate these two women so that I can make a statement about saving the rain-forest. If you know anyone skilled in doing this, I have a great script to follow and hopefully put it on television. Our rain-forest is being destroyed by forest industries and now, global warming. I see the forest as female, a nurturer of life. This unique Gondwanaland rain-forest is being clear-felled in Tasmania to allow for plantation trees to dominate so that forest industries can get fat on the money made for newspaper industries. the forest will end up as pulp. / http://www.apstas.com/gondwanatimeline.htm#GONDWANA

  • At Lake Myrtle, at the base of Mt Rogoona in Tasmania, on a cold morning a heavy layer of frost sits on an old log in the water, the mist in the air giving this scene an extra element. Taken with a Nikon D200 camera. A description of access to this area here An update, 9th June 2009 – I am totally thrilled at the response this image has received. Since adding it to my portfolio, nearly 10% of people viewing it have add it as a favourite, and exactly 50% of people that have commented on it also added it as a favourite. / Thank you to everyone for your response to this image. How much detail is there in my images? / This image has an example If you like this, you’ll probably like / my other images.

  • The house of Sir Walter Raleigh, the English bucaneer.

  • by Jesse J McClear

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Moss covered Myrtle Beech ============================================== / Featured and in the Top 10 of The_Scavenger_Hunt / Challenge Lets_Hunt_for_Trees ============================================== / Beautiful moss covered Myrtle Beech trees on our way to Poimena, The Blue Tier, Tasmania. The Myrtle Beech (Nothofagus cunninghamii), is an evergreen tree native to Victoria and Tasmania, Australia. It grows mainly in the diminishing temperate rainforests. It is not related to the Myrtle family. / These trees typically grow to 30-40 m tall and have large trunks with scaly, dark brown bark. Maximum height is about 55 m. The leaves are simple and alternate, growing 1-1.5 cm long, in Victoria up to 2 cm long. The leaf colour is dark green, with new growth brilliant red, pink or orange in spring. They are triangular with irregular minute teeth. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/160sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • Blossom’s_Photo_Gallery Fairytale Fungi Fly Agaric or Amanita muscaria is a distinctive fungus, with luscious red caps with white spots. It’s the fairytale fungus you see in children’s books. It’s quite common in gardens, growing with pines and oaks and birches, but it’s also escaped into native forest, where it’s a fungal weed in the Myrtle Beech Rainforests of Tasmania. Myrtle Grove Forest Park, on way to Launceston, Tasmania, Australia. Canon PowerShot A650 IS Shutter Speed: 1/125sec / Aperture: F4.8 / ISO: 200

  • My crape myrtle blooming and seeming to want to go through the opening in the clouds. At my home in Dunnellon, Florida. Sony P10 Cyber Shot digital camera FEATURED in Florida the Sunshine State, August 2009. Many thanks to the group. SOLD a matted print, December 2009 / My very first sale on Red Bubble!! Thanks a million!!

  • A large myrtle (Nothofagus cunninghami) develops buttresses to spread its increasing weight across the damp spongy rainforest floor. / Trowutta Arch Forest Reserve, NW Tasmania Nikon D40 / Nikkor 18-200mm lens @ 120mm featured in DSLR users only 16th August 2009 / featured in Unlimited Quality 23rd August 2009

  • Just thought this fit with this forest scene, and light beams REDUCED PRICE ON THIS IMAGE as a print, or poster Isaiah 41:18-20 I will open the rivers in the high places, and the fountains in the midst of the valleys. / I will make the wilderness a pool of water, and the dry land springs of water. / I will plant in the wilderness the cedar, and the shittah tree, and the myrtle, and the oil tree. / I will set in the desert the fir tree, and the pine, and the box tree together. / That they may see, and know, and consider, and understand together. That the hand of the Lord hath done this, and the Holy One of Isreal hath created it. /

RedBubble is a great place to find art, design, photos and writing from over 80,000 talented people.

You can buy their stuff

On stunning greeting cards, awesome t-shirts or beautiful prints to hang on your walls.

Risk Free Returns

It’s really simple. If you’re not happy with your purchase for any reason, we’ll fix it.

About RedBubble

Since February 2007 we’ve shipped over 331,500 items to more than 70 countries around the world.

Join In

Sign up for your free account, upload your work, join some groups and share your creative genius with the world.

Find More…

Myrtle T-Shirts

Myrtle Wall Art

Myrtle Journal Entries

Myrtle Writing

Myrtle Calendars