Plant wooded
272 creative works found
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From the wood it was born, / and to the wood it returns.. / / sold: 1 laminated print / / / / /
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More from the Lightscapes Set We were at a picnic when I needed the loo and being me I took my camera to just incase… and I’m glad I did as this was just around the corner!
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More from the Lightscapes Set Poem: The Secret Place From: The Ice Cream Store. Toronto: Harper Collins Publishers, 1991. There’s a place I go, inside myself, / Where nobody else can be, / And none of my friends can tell it’s there— / Nobody knows but me. It’s hard to explain the way it feels, / Or even where I go. / It isn’t a place in time or space, / But once I’m there, I know. It’s tiny, it’s shiny, it can’t be seen, / But it’s big as the sky at night . . . / I try to explain and it hurts my brain, / But once I’m there, it’s right. There’s a place I know inside myself, / And it’s neither big nor small, / And whenever I go, it feels as though / I never left at all.
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Lots of pen and ink dots on paper. A cropped version for greeting cards is available here
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Acrylic painting on canvas inspired by folklore and the mysterious ‘Face Through the Leaves’ which has always fascinated me. I used holly and ivy from my garden to refer to for this painting. Images of the Green Man have been found all around the world.
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Taken in my grandparents gardenlounge and almost impossible without HDR…
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The colour version of Lonely can be found here: L O N E L Y
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Taken May 08 at my Nanna’s Home. She’s been cultivating orchids for quite some time now.
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Poppy Pods… Enjoy!
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Shots of Ophelia and the friends she made along the way :D Loving Friends,Loving Life at my udonchow gallery.
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Sun rays crossing a misty forest photographed in an early autumn morning. Another image from the same series: /
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forest
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Lots of drafting pen dots on paper that gradually transformed into this abstract landscape. This version has been cropped to better fit the greeting card format. / Also available as framed or mounted prints. /
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Beautiful Latvia…
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......... not sure these are real shamrocks.
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In one way the barbed wire has quite a dark atmosphere about it, as it is something designed to cause pain. But on the other hand, when you look closely, i find there is something quite elegant about the twists and turns of the rust speckled wires.
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From the garden. These were not picked, I photographed them just as they were growing in the garden. The arrangement of these closely bonded flowers, growing like this, was wonderful to see! Copyright: Mariaan Krog 2008. / / Common wood sorrel is a plant from the genus Oxalis, common in most of Europe and parts of Asia. It flowers for a few months during the spring, with small white flowers with pink streaks. Red or violet flowers also occur rarely. (Ours has a purplish pink colour!) The binomial name is Oxalis acetosella, because of its sour taste. The leaflets are made up by three heart-shaped leaves, folded through the middle. The stalk is red/brown, and during the night or when it rains both flowers and leaves contract. Historically, people have extracted calcium oxalate, or “sal acetosella” from the plant, through boiling. It is slightly toxic, as oxalic acid is known to interfere with food digestion. Another common wood sorrel is Oxalis montana, a North American species found from New England and Nova Scotia to Wisconsin and Manitoba. It is similar to the species described above, but the petals are noticeably notched. The common wood sorrel is sometimes referred to as a shamrock (due to its three-leaf clover-like motif) and given as a gift on St. Patrick’s Day. / Source Naming of this plant, throughout the world: / Denmark/Dänemark / Skovsyre / Almindelig surkløver / Surkløver Germany/Deutschland / Buchampfer / Buchklee / Gauchampfer / Hainklee / Hain-Sauerklee / Hasenbrod (alemanisch, thüringisch) / Hasenklee / Hasenkohl / Hasenmoos (Westfalen) / Himmelsbrot / Holzklee / Kuckucksbrot / Kuckuckskäse / Kuckucksklee / Kuckuckskohl / Kuckuckssalat (Mecklenburg) / Kukuksklouwp (Plattdeutsch) / Sauerklee / Waldklee / Wald-Sauerklee / Waldwürze England / cuckoo-bread / Cuckowes Meat / Fairy Bells / Hallelujah / Irish shamrock / Seamrag (veraltet) / Shamrock / Sour Trefoil / Sour Trefoil / Stickwort / Stubwort / Surelle / Three-leaved Grass / Wood sorrel Estland / harilik jänesekapsas Finland / Ketunleipä / Käenkaali France / Alléluia / Herbes aux coucous / Oseille de bucheron ou de Paques / Oxalis des bois / Oxalis petite oseille / Pain de Coucou / Petite oseille / Surelle petit oxalide / Surelle / Vinaigrette Holland/Netherland / Witte klaverzuring Ireland / Seamsog Iceland / Sursmæra Italian / Acetosella dei boschi / Iuliole Latin Names / Oxalis acetosella L. / Oxalis acetosella Scop. (Synonym) / Oxalis alba Gilib. (Synonym) / Oxys (veraltet) / Oxytriphyllon (veraltet) / Trifolium acetosum (Synonym, veraltet) Norway / Gaukesyre / Gaukesyra / Gjøkesyre Austria / Holzklee (Niederösterreich) Poland / Szczawik zajeczy Scotland / Gowke-Meat Switzerland / Süppli (Zürich) / Chäs und Brot (Graubünden) Sweden / Harsyra Surklöver Spain / Aleluya Chec Republic / štavel kyselý Hungary / Erdei madársóska / SOURCE
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From the garden. These are very tiny flowers. I knelt down to take this pic and the others. ;D Copyright: Mariaan Krog 2008. / / Common wood sorrel is a plant from the genus Oxalis, common in most of Europe and parts of Asia. It flowers for a few months during the spring, with small white flowers with pink streaks. Red or violet flowers also occur rarely. (Ours is a purplish pink colour).The binomial name is Oxalis acetosella, because of its sour taste. The leaflets are made up by three heart-shaped leaves, folded through the middle. The stalk is red/brown, and during the night or when it rains both flowers and leaves contract. Historically, people have extracted calcium oxalate, or “sal acetosella” from the plant, through boiling. It is slightly toxic, as oxalic acid is known to interfere with food digestion. Another common wood sorrel is Oxalis montana, a North American species found from New England and Nova Scotia to Wisconsin and Manitoba. It is similar to the species described above, but the petals are noticeably notched. The common wood sorrel is sometimes referred to as a shamrock (due to its three-leaf clover-like motif) and given as a gift on St. Patrick’s Day. / Source Naming of this plant, throughout the world: / Denmark/Dänemark / Skovsyre / Almindelig surkløver / Surkløver Germany/Deutschland / Buchampfer / Buchklee / Gauchampfer / Hainklee / Hain-Sauerklee / Hasenbrod (alemanisch, thüringisch) / Hasenklee / Hasenkohl / Hasenmoos (Westfalen) / Himmelsbrot / Holzklee / Kuckucksbrot / Kuckuckskäse / Kuckucksklee / Kuckuckskohl / Kuckuckssalat (Mecklenburg) / Kukuksklouwp (Plattdeutsch) / Sauerklee / Waldklee / Wald-Sauerklee / Waldwürze England / cuckoo-bread / Cuckowes Meat / Fairy Bells / Hallelujah / Irish shamrock / Seamrag (veraltet) / Shamrock / Sour Trefoil / Sour Trefoil / Stickwort / Stubwort / Surelle / Three-leaved Grass / Wood sorrel Estland / harilik jänesekapsas Finland / Ketunleipä / Käenkaali France / Alléluia / Herbes aux coucous / Oseille de bucheron ou de Paques / Oxalis des bois / Oxalis petite oseille / Pain de Coucou / Petite oseille / Surelle petit oxalide / Surelle / Vinaigrette Holland/Netherland / Witte klaverzuring Ireland / Seamsog Iceland / Sursmæra Italian / Acetosella dei boschi / Iuliole Latin Names / Oxalis acetosella L. / Oxalis acetosella Scop. (Synonym) / Oxalis alba Gilib. (Synonym) / Oxys (veraltet) / Oxytriphyllon (veraltet) / Trifolium acetosum (Synonym, veraltet) Norway / Gaukesyre / Gaukesyra / Gjøkesyre Austria / Holzklee (Niederösterreich) Poland / Szczawik zajeczy Scotland / Gowke-Meat Switzerland / Süppli (Zürich) / Chäs und Brot (Graubünden) Sweden / Harsyra Surklöver Spain / Aleluya Chec Republic / štavel kyselý Hungary / Erdei madársóska / SOURCE
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Ok, this is a pic of what a typical Aussie backyard used to be like before people started building houses right on top of each other. Of course it’s never usually this frosty looking…but….whilst I was racking my brain trying to come up with a name for it I started singing the song “Down Under” by Men At Work, so that’s what I called it. / / Down Under by Men At Work / / Traveling in a fried-out combie / On a hippie trail, head full of zombie / I met a strange lady, she made me nervous / She took me in and gave me breakfast / And she said, / / “Do you come from a land down under? / Where women glow and men plunder? / Can’t you hear, can’t you hear the thunder? / You better run, you better take cover.” / / Buying bread from a man in Brussels / He was six foot four and full of muscles / I said, “Do you speak-a my language?” / He just smiled and gave me a vegemite sandwich / And he said, / / “I come from a land down under / Where beer does flow and men chunder / Can’t you hear, can’t you hear the thunder? / You better run, you better take cover.” / / Lying in a den in Bombay / With a slack jaw, and not much to say / I said to the man, “Are you trying to tempt me / Because I come from the land of plenty?” / And he said, / / “Oh! Do you come from a land down under? (oh yeah yeah) / Where women glow and men plunder? / Can’t you hear, can’t you hear the thunder? / You better run, you better take cover.”
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I love the bronze and texture colour of this leaf, which I photographed on the deck..
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