Nature symbolic 

536 creative works found

  • A Woman with outstretched arms seems to hold the sun between her two hands. It is late in the evening and there is an orange glow everywhere

  • Macro shot of a multicolored leaf.

  • A macro shot of an orange/yellow/red leaf

  • The symbols in this image are the tree of life with the rabbit representing birth and the raven representing death. The trees roots are wrapped around the figure of a woman; the soul of nature in her endless labor, toiling and eroding in her cyclical eternity. Photo Montage.

  • Acrylic, spray paint and stencils. / 1500X550cm The frog was quite happy waiting and dreaming about how true loves first kiss would feel.

  • @ All images are copyright of Rosa Cobos 2008 . Rights reserved I have dreamnt with eyes opened.. / beleiving the night was a flower. / Ivory petals of shinning blood.. / as plants have their own.. / in trasparent delicacies.. / pulsing with the sun within. My eyes blinded by breathing.. / such a matter of confussion.. / tears as blood.. / blood as tears.. / air… dark as water.. / at the opening of myriads of stars.. / never to come out / of their darkness littering. An angel emerged from my senses… / fathom of energies revolted against the light. / Was it he.. was it she.. / was it I..?.. may be? / Floating in emotions.. / understood as a heart / insuflated by thinking… / Unsubstantial as ether.. / Maremagnum of vitality.. / enclosed in a primordial womb. I have dreamnt with eyes opened.. / beleiving I was dreaming…my soul, / dragging tangled weeds … / Heavy rememberings.. / of all the minutes.. / my Soul had lived… / without emtpying the desire´s well. / (Rosa Cobos) © Copyright 2008 Rosa Cobos . All rights reserved

  • @ All images are copyright of Rosa Cobos 2008 . Rights reserved This work is dedicated to cloudsdreams my wish to place her already developed soul the nearest of the Light that nourish. A gem of an artist…a complete and wild woman. My best for her. There was a rope.. / golden link.. / between.. / mind and body… / soul. / Truly transparent.. / but strong… / tight when thoughts.. / flew.. high. / searching for its own.. / specular image.. / in the shade.. / of a Universe lost. And my flesh… was tied.. / too.. much.. / to the bones… and cold earth.. / palpitating so slow… I cut it out.. / with a blow.. / of a cry bursting.. / from… too satiated… / human pores. I let them go.. / multicoloured… a feather sound.. / a feather empty of real essence.. / a speck of Life… / competing with the tears of clouds.. / so light… smooth.. and white.. / while.. / the heavy ones.. / dark… quenched… / rested by myself.. / just about to be drowned. Quivering…and free… / sons and daughters / of a nothingness.. / meaning a somethingness.. / to a truly companion.. / as I was. / (Rosa Cobos) © Copyright Rosa Cobos 2008 . All rights reserved

  • Makes me happy, will make you happy too! / / Order Postage Stamp: / / More Photos: /

  • thank you sooo much to the anonymous buyer who purchased this poster on June 27, 2008! cheers! / A BIG THANK YOU to the fabulous buyer who bought this large framed print on the 12th of September, 2008! cheers :) /

  • The Raven symbolizes the dark and difficult aspects of life, which is a part of life we often misunderstand and rarely effectively deal with. The dark aspects are not bad or evil, as it is necessary to go through a process of darkness in order to emerge in the light. Dark comes before light, healing is preceded by illness, the storm eventually transforms to calm and so on. The Raven reminds us of the need for this balance, and that without accepting the full integration of the cycle of dark and light, we cannot truly heal. The Raven is also a messenger between two worlds: the living world and the twilit Otherworld or spirit world. By connecting these two worlds, the Raven initiates us into a new way of being. The Raven travels from this world to the next; accessing the darkest regions bringing back visions and instructions for the seeker and the healer. Often, before advancing in any spiritual growth, one must sacrifice or let go of old ways of being. The Raven gives us insight into what old patterns must die in order to make way for the new. In this painting, the Raven flies at twilight, the time when the veil between the two worlds is at its thinnest. It flies over an ancient megalithic mound, where one can access the Otherworld. I didn’t paint the Raven feathers simply black, but are actually made of layers of blues, violets and greens. I did this to symbolize that all possibilities exist within the void of darkness, just waiting to emerge. In Eastern and Celtic traditions the Raven is a solar symbol. In my dream the Raven flew beneath a full moon, which I have interpreted here as the night sun, illuminating the landscape. But, traces of the setting sun are still visible in the horizon and limning the edge of the mound and distant trees and hills. I am by no means and authority on the Raven mythos. Feel free to interpret your own meanings, and, please share them here if you like. It is always fascinating to hear how others interpret such powerful archetypes. DoAn (The Raven: Healing and Initiation, 5×7”, ink fresco)

  • Chinese word “hei” means “double happiness” in english. This symbol is used in all chinese weddings. featured in the group Fabulous Flowers on the 25th of June, 2008.

  • Whether you are new or old to the homeschooling world make your statement as an inclusive homeschooler…really inclusive.

  • Attributes of Turtle: Self contained, protection, and creative source. Turtle represents Mother Earth, informed decisions, planning and adaptability…can awaken the senses on both the physical and spiritual level. Perceiving, inner knowledge. As you can see, Turtle represents powerful medicine.

  • Sumatran tiger – original photograph, digitally accented. Captive animal. / / Name: Panthera tigris sumatrae (Sumatran Tiger) Description: The Sumatran tiger has the darkest coat of all tigers. Its broad, black stripes are closely spaced and often doubled. Unlike the Siberian tiger, it has striped forelegs. Sumatran tigers are the smallest tiger subspecies. Males average 2.4 meters (8 feet) in length from head to tail and weigh about 120 kilograms (264 pounds). Females measure approximately 2.2 meters (7 feet) in length and weigh about 90 kilograms (198 pounds). Distribution: The Sumatran tiger is found only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra in habitat that ranges from lowland forest to submontain and montain forest with some peat-moss forest. Biology: The Sumatran tiger eats wild pig, big deer (called rusa), and small deer (called muntjak or barking deer). The specific range size of this tiger is not know, however the population density is approximately 4–5 adult tigers/100 km 2 (39 mile 2) in optimal lowland rainforest. As elevation increases through submontain and montain forests, the number of tigers in any given area decreases because there is less prey available. Status in the wild: 400-500 wild Sumatran tigers were believed to exist in 1998, primarily in the island’s national park areas, but no island-wide census or monitoring system has been possible. Tiger numbers have continued to decline because of poaching of tigers to supply the illegal trade in tiger parts. The last remnants of lowland forest are being eliminated to establish oil palm plantations and for shifting agriculture by recent settlers from other areas of Sumatra and Indonesia. Ongoing road development makes many formerly inaccessible mountain areas accessible to illegal logging even on the steepest slopes, and many mountainous areas are being converted into plantations for coffee and other products for international markets. Tigers are legally protected but are not highly valued. Captive breeding: For three years, the Indonesian Zoological Parks’ Association (PKBSI) has been working with the Tiger Global Conservation Strategy to develop a conservation program for Sumatran tigers. In addition to the 65 Sumatran tigers living in Indonesian zoos, there are 55 tigers managed by North American zoos, 100 in European zoos, and 12 in Australasian zoos. This captive population is descended from 37 wild-caught founders. The Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Masterplan now has the potential to function as the heart of the Sumatran tiger population worldwide. It is designed to preserve sufficient genetic diversity to reinforce both captive and wild populations, thus fulfilling its goal to ensure that the in situ tiger program comprises verifiable founders permanently identified and registered in the Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Studbook. It also extends the capabilities of Indonesian zoo staff to professionally manage their tiger programs in Indonesia, and at the same time serves as a model for other range country tiger management programs in Southeast Asia.

  • Brown bear aka Grizzly bear (Ursus horribilis), captive zoo animal, digitally accented Wilderness lost The victims of human beings come in all shapes and sizes, from the largest to the small. Gone are the days of grizzlies roaming the prairies of North America for roots and wolf pack leftovers. Everything associated with the prairies is turned to dust, blown to the corners of the globe. One has to travel far to seek out the last truly wild places, those nooks of nature that only the sun and clouds visit with regularity. Someday they too will be but a destination on someone’s itinerary. The wandering, restless soul keeps wild places in their hearts, and when they venture forth into the wood they feel the ripples of time and days gone by flowing like the unstoppable river throughout the hollow skeleton of what once was a place of mystery and passion. The great bears have been pushed to the limit, needing protection even in their remaining strongholds, where man is still a visitor. Golden aspens and billowing birch trees, where the sky is the only rooftop and every direction provides a window. We seek so much to regain the things we destroy, in nature and in love, so why should we weep at the humbleness and sad truth of a mighty creature napping in a concrete jungle? Because one glimpse into its eyes reveals the genes forged from rivers and floods, mountains and valleys, winters of endless desolation and summers of famine and frivolity with cubs. Wilderness was a catch phrase, now it is but a ghost, and time marches on leaving the ramshackled remnants of a once great species. Mighty bear, the hunter, the spirit, symbol of what was and still should be American Wilderness. He, the gentile beast, should spend lazy days napping and berry picking and sratching in thickets of tender alders, pondering as only a wild bear ponders the cottonwood seeds. And yet this is not the way the story goes, this bear goes by the name of Bruce. “The idea of wilderness needs no defense, it only needs defenders.” / -Edward Abbey /

  • Another Sumatran tiger, taken in the Dickinson Park Zoo. Name: Panthera tigris sumatrae (Sumatran Tiger) Description: The Sumatran tiger has the darkest coat of all tigers. Its broad, black stripes are closely spaced and often doubled. Unlike the Siberian tiger, it has striped forelegs. Sumatran tigers are the smallest tiger subspecies. Males average 2.4 meters (8 feet) in length from head to tail and weigh about 120 kilograms (264 pounds). Females measure approximately 2.2 meters (7 feet) in length and weigh about 90 kilograms (198 pounds). Distribution: The Sumatran tiger is found only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra in habitat that ranges from lowland forest to submontain and montain forest with some peat-moss forest. Biology: The Sumatran tiger eats wild pig, big deer (called rusa), and small deer (called muntjak or barking deer). The specific range size of this tiger is not know, however the population density is approximately 4–5 adult tigers/100 km 2 (39 mile 2) in optimal lowland rainforest. As elevation increases through submontain and montain forests, the number of tigers in any given area decreases because there is less prey available. Status in the wild: 400-500 wild Sumatran tigers were believed to exist in 1998, primarily in the island’s national park areas, but no island-wide census or monitoring system has been possible. Tiger numbers have continued to decline because of poaching of tigers to supply the illegal trade in tiger parts. The last remnants of lowland forest are being eliminated to establish oil palm plantations and for shifting agriculture by recent settlers from other areas of Sumatra and Indonesia. Ongoing road development makes many formerly inaccessible mountain areas accessible to illegal logging even on the steepest slopes, and many mountainous areas are being converted into plantations for coffee and other products for international markets. Tigers are legally protected but are not highly valued. Captive breeding: For three years, the Indonesian Zoological Parks’ Association (PKBSI) has been working with the Tiger Global Conservation Strategy to develop a conservation program for Sumatran tigers. In addition to the 65 Sumatran tigers living in Indonesian zoos, there are 55 tigers managed by North American zoos, 100 in European zoos, and 12 in Australasian zoos. This captive population is descended from 37 wild-caught founders. The Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Masterplan now has the potential to function as the heart of the Sumatran tiger population worldwide. It is designed to preserve sufficient genetic diversity to reinforce both captive and wild populations, thus fulfilling its goal to ensure that the in situ tiger program comprises verifiable founders permanently identified and registered in the Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Studbook. It also extends the capabilities of Indonesian zoo staff to professionally manage their tiger programs in Indonesia, and at the same time serves as a model for other range country tiger management programs in Southeast Asia.

  • Name: Panthera tigris sumatrae (Sumatran Tiger) Description: The Sumatran tiger has the darkest coat of all tigers. Its broad, black stripes are closely spaced and often doubled. Unlike the Siberian tiger, it has striped forelegs. Sumatran tigers are the smallest tiger subspecies. Males average 2.4 meters (8 feet) in length from head to tail and weigh about 120 kilograms (264 pounds). Females measure approximately 2.2 meters (7 feet) in length and weigh about 90 kilograms (198 pounds). Distribution: The Sumatran tiger is found only on the Indonesian island of Sumatra in habitat that ranges from lowland forest to submontain and montain forest with some peat-moss forest. Biology: The Sumatran tiger eats wild pig, big deer (called rusa), and small deer (called muntjak or barking deer). The specific range size of this tiger is not know, however the population density is approximately 4–5 adult tigers/100 km 2 (39 mile 2) in optimal lowland rainforest. As elevation increases through submontain and montain forests, the number of tigers in any given area decreases because there is less prey available. Status in the wild: 400-500 wild Sumatran tigers were believed to exist in 1998, primarily in the island’s national park areas, but no island-wide census or monitoring system has been possible. Tiger numbers have continued to decline because of poaching of tigers to supply the illegal trade in tiger parts. The last remnants of lowland forest are being eliminated to establish oil palm plantations and for shifting agriculture by recent settlers from other areas of Sumatra and Indonesia. Ongoing road development makes many formerly inaccessible mountain areas accessible to illegal logging even on the steepest slopes, and many mountainous areas are being converted into plantations for coffee and other products for international markets. Tigers are legally protected but are not highly valued. Captive breeding: For three years, the Indonesian Zoological Parks’ Association (PKBSI) has been working with the Tiger Global Conservation Strategy to develop a conservation program for Sumatran tigers. In addition to the 65 Sumatran tigers living in Indonesian zoos, there are 55 tigers managed by North American zoos, 100 in European zoos, and 12 in Australasian zoos. This captive population is descended from 37 wild-caught founders. The Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Masterplan now has the potential to function as the heart of the Sumatran tiger population worldwide. It is designed to preserve sufficient genetic diversity to reinforce both captive and wild populations, thus fulfilling its goal to ensure that the in situ tiger program comprises verifiable founders permanently identified and registered in the Indonesian Sumatran Tiger Studbook. It also extends the capabilities of Indonesian zoo staff to professionally manage their tiger programs in Indonesia, and at the same time serves as a model for other range country tiger management programs in Southeast Asia.

  • Darth doing a little tending of his wildflowers.

  • this is a digital collage of *two acrylic paintings on paper * , a woman portrait , and trees automnal golden colors ,moon goddess , and Harvest Moon- NEIL YOUNG / Come a little bit closer / Hear what I have to say / Just like children sleepin’ / We could dream this night away. But there’s a full moon risin’ / Let’s go dancin’ in the light / We know where the music’s playin’ / Let’s go out and feel the night. Because I’m still in love with you / I want to see you dance again / Because I’m still in love with you / On this harvest moon. When we were strangers / I watched you from afar / When we were lovers / I loved you with all my heart. But now it’s gettin’ late / And the moon is climbin’ high / I want to celebrate / See it shinin’ in your eye. Because I’m still in love with you / I want to see you dance again / Because I’m still in love with you / On this harvest moon.

  • Heather falling dawn and creating a shadow TOP TEN IN THE CHALLENGE Best Design for Black Shirt

  • Fargesia is a family of bamboos, found in alpine conifer forests of East Asia. They are known in Chinese as “jian zhu” meaning “arrow bamboo”. / Fargesia victualia is only found on Tanega Island, South of Japan and is grown as a source for food and fuel. / The field in this painting consists of about 700 shoots. This image shows a detail. / This image gives an impression of the actual size. oil on canvas / 180×120 cm / original available

  • symbolic depiction of “Gaia” the earth mother

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 295,300 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…

Nature Symbolic T-Shirts

Nature Symbolic Wall Art

Nature Symbolic Journal Entries

Nature Symbolic Writing

Nature Symbolic Calendars