Rampant 

39 creative works found

  • The royal flag of Scotland!

  • Sunset silhouette of bronze statues of Stallions Rampant at Rymill Coonawarra Winery. The two magnificent bronze stallions rampant, created by the noted sculptor Gabriel Sterk, welcome visitors to the Rymill Coonawarra Winery. Such horses have long been important to the Rymill family, and were an integral part of their business for a number of generations. Coonawarra’s terra rossa soil, with its high calcium content, raised horses with strong bones and powerful constitutions long before it became famous for the excellence of its vineyards and wines. Gabriel Sterk’s life and career have alternated between Europe and Australia. Born in Holland in 1942, he emigrated to Adelaide with his family in 1958, but his developing career and talent soon drew him back to the art treasures of Europe; first of all to Italy, and then to the Royal Academy in Holland. He now lives in France, where he sculpted the original of the stallions rampant in clay, prior to their being cast in bronze at a foundry in Holland, and then shipped to Australia where they now stand proudly before the winery, evoking the past and eliciting the future. Canon 400D – 18 -55 lens with CIR Polariser. Photoshop Cs3 for contrast.

  • Two magnificent bronze stallions rampant, created by the noted sculptor Gabriel Sterk, welcome visitors to the Rymill Coonawarra Winery . Stephen Chapple and I will displaying our work in this amazing winery during the Penola Coonawarra Arts Festival .

  • I must admit to being lucky with this photo, I was about to press the shutter button when the big guy flapped his wings.

  • Commonly known as The Lion Rampant, The Royal Standard of Scotland, also known as the Royal Standard of the King of Scots is the flag used historically by the King of Scots. It is a banner of the Royal Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Scotland.

  • Commonly known as The Lion Rampant, The Royal Standard of Scotland, also known as the Royal Standard of the King of Scots is the flag used historically by the King of Scots. It is a banner of the Royal Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Scotland.

  • Commonly known as The Lion Rampant, The Royal Standard of Scotland, also known as the Royal Standard of the King of Scots is the flag used historically by the King of Scots. It is a banner of the Royal Coat of Arms of the Kingdom of Scotland.

  • This was taken at the 1996 Australian National Folk Festival. Morris Rampant was the medieval morris dancing troupe derived from both Belswaggers and Moreton Bay dancers. Very violent,approach with caution, do not serve alcohol they will want to be your best friend and will start singing pub songs about hares chasing hounds. Here we are performing the stick and bucket dance without buckets, which is a lot safer. For those who don’t know, Morris dancing is a form of English folk dancing. It is a pagan fertility rite with a number of rituals that has survived the many centuries of Christian oppression. I suppose it’s a lot easier for cowardly little preacher bullies to burn little old ladies and young women at the stake than it is to burn big burly men with very large cudgels that can be used for thumping people.

  • Rampant (Old French: rampant, “rearing up”) refers to the attitude where the beast is reared up on its hind legs, standing on its left, with its forelegs lifted, the right usually above the left. When on the escutcheon, the body usually faces the sinister. Rampant guardant is this attitude with the beast’s head turned out. Rampant is one of the most common attitudes for supporters.

  • Rampant (Old French: rampant, “rearing up”) refers to the attitude where the beast is reared up on its hind legs, standing on its left, with its forelegs lifted, the right usually above the left. When on the escutcheon, the body usually faces the sinister. Rampant guardant is this attitude with the beast’s head turned out. Rampant is one of the most common attitudes for supporters.

  • Rampant (Old French: rampant, “rearing up”) refers to the attitude where the beast is reared up on its hind legs, standing on its left, with its forelegs lifted, the right usually above the left. When on the escutcheon, the body usually faces the sinister. Rampant guardant is this attitude with the beast’s head turned out. Rampant is one of the most common attitudes for supporters.

  • Rampant (Old French: rampant, “rearing up”) refers to the attitude where the beast is reared up on its hind legs, standing on its left, with its forelegs lifted, the right usually above the left. When on the escutcheon, the body usually faces the sinister. Rampant guardant is this attitude with the beast’s head turned out. Rampant is one of the most common attitudes for supporters.

  • The coat of arms of Henry II.

  • Henry II.’s coat of arms :)

  • Henry II.’s coat of arms

  • Henry II.’s coat of arms :)

  • Scottish Royal Standard flying at the Aviemore Ski Centre, Scotland

  • High quality lion rampant (originally vector drawn)

  • For no particluar reason I drew this very angry zebra, by hand, the old fashioned way…. / Just added a little inner and outer glow in P.shop…. /

  • Another angry mammal rearing up on its hind legs… / (...maybe I’m working out some “issues” from the year or something…) / Pencil and ink, with inner and outer glow by Photoshop… /

  • Selective colouring image of the Saltire and the Lion Rampant, flying on a boat on Loch Lomond Scotland. I decided to change this image to selective colouring as it gave more emphasis to the flag as they were dancing in the wind!

  • Lion Rampant engraved into the wall of Torosay Castle, Mull. The symbol of a lion has been used as a heraldic device for many centuries by Scottish Kings. William I of Scotland (1165 -1214 ) was known as ‘The Lion’ after he introduced the lion symbol into his coat of arms. The Scottish lion has always been shown, on the royal shield, as being Rampant, ie: shown standing erect on the hind legs with the head in profile and forelegs extended. Taken with canon 450D & Tamron 70-300mm Lens All profits from sales in 2009 will be donated to macmillan cancer support: www.macmillan.org.uk

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 332,300 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…

Rampant T-Shirts

Rampant Wall Art

Rampant Journal Entries

Rampant Writing

Rampant Calendars