Pastele tree 

497 creative works found

  • This is the Original photo I took and manipulated to make Dream Pool

  • A pastel drawing of two white-lipped tree frogs.

  • The fog rolled in just as the sun was setting giving it a pretty pastel color.

  • Minutes before sunrise the cold mist of an autumn morning rises off the still surface of Clear Lake in Washington

  • Pastel painting on Canson 3/4 sheet—framed ready to hang.Can be picked up at my studio or courierd, to anywhere in Australia please request a shipping charge. / $490.00 [framed] This is one a several in the series of Grass Trees done with pastel and/ or oils. /

  • It was a beautiful morning!

  • tempera and pastel on mdf / cm 70×100

  • A small pastel…....... I spent a long time ill in a room near this tree and came to love its fecundity and glorious shade. Watching the wonderful seed-pods expand, pop …....showering the damp earth in fresh seed, were reminders of cycles and change …........ (original sold)

  • The two gorgeous little bodies on the right are my grandchildren, Darcy and Rory, with two friends after a long day of adventuring. My daughter grabbed this one soon after it was finished and it now hangs in her home. Pastel on Colourfix Pastel Paper / 50 cm X 44 cm Original grabbed by daughter!

  • Another one of Willowmavin, a beautiful area near where I live. In this pastel painting I tried to convey the warmth and beauty of the early evening, and the slight breeze that just moved the grasses. A lovely local lady bought this work – she took it home, laid it on the bed while deciding where to hang it, her husband arrives, sits on the bed AND THE PAINTING, and breaks the glass! Fortunately no damage to the actual painting, not so sure about the husband!! Pastel on Colourfix Pastel Paper 53cm X 43cm Original SOLD

  • A touch of Orton

  • 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

  • My first pastel Australian landscape painting. Imagine tranquil pools of still water, surrounded by worn rock, soft grasses swaying in the breeze. Take in the majestic and photogenic landscape, listen to nature and refresh your soul! I walked alone into a tranquil land / felt the coolness of the water with the palm of my hand / I looked up to the sky and turned my face to the sun / lost in the moment, with nature I was one….... a magic place to be.

  • Pastel painting on Black Acid Free Canson Paper using hard chalk pastels and Faber Castell pastel pencils. The magnificent Daintree Forest is located in tropical far north Queensland, Australia. This world heritage listed forest is over 135 million years old – the oldest in the world and spans 1,200 square kilometres. It is home to the highest number of plant and animal species that are rare, or threatened with extinction anywhere in the world. It surely is the most diverse and beautiful example of mother nature at its very best. “I walked alone into no man’s land / and with my eyes witnessed the beauty of nature’s hand. / Green veils of leaves and trees stood tall / Babbling sounds of water and then a bird’s call. / Standing proud surviving all time, / this magnifcent forest forever in its prime! This is just a very small part of this tranquil and magical forest. Inspiration for this painting came from my daughter’s photograph called Daintree Bliss which is just one of her many beautiful photos:tracyleephoto“ FEATURED IN: FLOTSAM AND JETSAM / IMAGE WRITING

  • looking up through pastel coloured glasses series

  • oil pastels and oil sticks, acrylic, paper (tissue almost!) 60gsm / a abstract of my environment!!!

  • This is kind of a reworking of my Butterfly Glade image, in a way. I was never quite happy with how that turned out but at the time, didn’t have the skills to do a better job. I always wanted to try something similar again… :) This image is a mixed media creation; the background image is a pastel drawing I did specifically for the purpose, which has then had several hundred layers of photos overlayed in Photoshop. All resources used are my own, with the exception of two brushes: the brush for the hair was courtesy of Trisste Brushes, the brush for the vines was courtesy of Obsidian Dawn.com. All photos by me on either my old Kodak Easyshare CX3700 or my Canon Powershot A480 compact cameras. Proudly New Zealand made. :) Featured in Yellow Gallery, Nov 14, 2009.

  • APPLE AND CHERRIES (PASTELS ON SANDED PAPER)

  • Saipan, Mariana Islands, July 2009

  • Pastel on Colourfix paper – 50cm x 35cm This is the second painting of a pair I did a couple of years ago, depicting a misty morning among the Ironbark species of eucalypts on our bush block near Seymour, Victoria.

  • Pastel on Colourfix Paper (terracotta) – 35cm x 50cm This is the first painting of a pair I did a couple of years ago, depicting a misty morning among the Ironbark species of eucalypts on our bush block near Seymour, Victoria.

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