Red small 

602 creative works found

  • This is Clara….. Sometimes when Clara wakes up there are clouds.

  • A single drop of water. So small and overlooked. Yet heavy enough to leave an impression on a delicate rose petal. Our massive ecosystem, a fragile element of everyday life.

  • A little abstract-ish macro.

  • Cute cafe in a small town.

  • steve like this one (bodymechanic). I will hang it in the next Gallery 26 show. It’s very textured, layered, and it has sparkles.

  • Black-chinned hummingbird nectar feeding. /

  • Four candy hearts on black background with reflection.

  • I rarely see a red spider…here is one having a drink!

  • A shot of a purple Finch eating at my birdfeeder.I’m still practicing,birds are not that easy to catch…. :))Birds always make a great card to give. / /

  • / / Baby & Kids TShirts available in this design at My Zazzle Store Even Angels Get the Blues in Blues Even Angels Get the Blues is a mixed media production on brown paper. / I’ve used white acrylic gesso to undercoat haphazardly, then applied felt tip pen, charcoal and pastels to fill in and shade…. It’s sad I know, but even angels get the blues … / / Even Angels Get the Blues is a mixed media production on brown paper. / I’ve used white acrylic gesso to undercoat haphazardly, then applied felt tip pen, charcoal and pastels to fill in and shade…. It’s sad I know, but even angels get the blues … Even Angels Get the Blues Small Design / http://www.redbubble.com/people/karin/clothing/1548018-1-even-angels-get-the-blues-tshirt / Even Angels Get the Blues Large Design / / Even Angels Get the Blues in Blues if you have any enquiries please email karintaylor@exemail.com.au / /

  • A white lion head bunny flying behind a chair Olympus E520 40-150mm Featured in DSLR Users Only – 3 A Day – 20.5.2009 www.arvebettum.com

  • Oestridae (commonly called bot flies or botflies) is a family of Oestroidea. It is one of several families of hairy flies whose larvae live as parasites within the bodies of mammals. There are approximately 150 known species worldwide. Eggs are deposited in animal skin directly, the body heat of the animal induces hatching upon contact. Some forms of botfly also reside in the digestive tract when consumed by a licking action. When ready to emerge, a thumbnail-sized lump will appear and the Fly will break through the skin and fly away leaving it’s host alive with a small wound. / Wiki / Olympus E510

  • The original Fiat 500. The one we love. Unless we have to drive it…

  • Malachite butterfly (lat. Siproeta stelenes)

  • Abstract Macro Photography The picture below is a stolen, burnt out car. / This is showing the rear right side. / You can see what has been produced by the fire / Armley Woods, Leeds. / sunday 31.5.09 / 7.15am / For all these phenomina to appear on the car, the car has been left on fire, and eventually, there is nothing left on the car to burn, so it just dies out. the paint work on the car , bubbles up and seperates itself from the metal at very hot temperatures. / Once it is all cool down, it is very delicate. / You just blow the flakey paint lightly, and this abstract art lies beneath. / If the car had been put out by water, im pretty sure that no abstracts would have appeared.

  • When I noticed this in the rainforest, the first thing I thought os was the bigger one came up first to check if it was safe, now the other one comes up. Looked so cute :) Not sure on the species, about 1 inch tall, these looked almost fully grown. Top coated with slime, very slipery indeed. You can see the reflections of the canopy in the caps.. Photogrpahed in Kondalilla National Park, Queendland, Australia. It was raining lightly as I shot this, and had been heavily raining for a few hours previous. Wasn’t a very good hiking day.. Canon 50D, 800mm (400mm + 2x Tamron). Available Large, and best viewed large!

  • All photographs and artworks in this portfolio are copyrighted and owned by the artist, Anne Staub. Any reproduction, modification, publication, transmission, transfer, or exploitation of any of the content, for personal or commercial use, whether in whole or in part, without written permission from myself is prohibited. All rights reserved.

  • I’m so excited …. I live a mile or so from Swan Island Dahlia Farm in Canby Oregon and they are starting to bloom. Here is my first photo from there. Gorgeous red beauty. I love the petals on this dahlia. Nikon D80 FEATURED in the Beautiful group / Most Popular / My Favorites / Dahlias / Cards and Collages / Calendars Please visit my bubblesite. Images are categorized making it easier to find exactly what you are looking for. Thanks for taking the time to enjoy my work. Cee

  • My origami calendar The red string of fate is based on a Chinese myth that the gods tie an invisible red string around the ankles of men and women destined to be soulmates. This myth is has been adapted into other east asian cultures as well. I first became familiar with it by watching anime; though in those cases, one would attempt to match up couples by tying their fingers. This image, while on one hand based on that Chinese legend, is one that defines me. With the red thread forming the heart, I frame what is currently my greatest passion: miniature origami. I fold using tweezers, and sometimes with needles (I show a needle here, though for these hearts I only used tweezers as they are not that small). The hearts of paper and string, while representing my passion, also represent my soul, and how my fate is bound by the constraints of life. I’m in my own little world bound by a thread of fate; though my passion lies in a world of paper. While most women primarily use needles for sowing; I primarily use them for tiny origami :P I would adjust the position of the objects here with tweezers, and sometimes got magnetic reactions between the tweezers and the needle. They say opposites attrack… but they are both metal :] Each heart was folded from a 15×15mm piece of paper. For a better idea of scale: This work has been featured in: / Macro Photography / Inspired Art / All About Hearts / Color Me a Rainbow

  • Lithuania, Klaipeda region, Curonian spit / THIS SERIES FROM / August 14-16, 2009 : morning/day/evening/night CLICK FOR COMMENTS ! The Curonian Lagoon (or Bay, Gulf; Russian: Kуршский залив, Lithuanian: Kuršių Marios, Polish: Zalew Kuroński, German: Kurisches Haff) is separated from the Baltic Sea by the Curonian Spit. / In the 13th century, the area around the lagoon was part of the ancestral lands of the Curonians and Old Prussian people. Later it bordered the historical region of Lithuania Minor. At the northern end of the Spit, there is a passage to the Baltic Sea, and the place was chosen by the Teutonic Knights in 1252 to found Memelburg castle and the city of Memel. The town is officially called Klaipėda since 1923 when the Memel Territory was separated from the German Empire. / As the new Interwar border, the river that flows into the Curonian Lagoon near Rusnė (German: Ruß) was chosen. The river’s lower 120km in Germany were called die Memel by Germans, while the upper part located in Lithuania was known as Nemunas River. The border also separated the peninsula near the small holiday resort of Nida, Lithuania (German: Nidden); the southern part of the Spit and the Lagoon remained in Germany until 1945. / This border remains today, as after World War II, the southern end of the Spit and the German area south of the river, the part of East Prussia with the town Königsberg located in Sambia, became part an exclave of Russia called Kaliningrad Oblast. WIKIPEDIA

  • Apophysis/fractal explorer composite If there’s one thing that I’m sure of / out of all the things I know / it’s that you can keep on going fast / I’ll still be going slow / and falling’s not that hard / when you’re starting out so low / and drowning’s not that bad / if you breathe and just let go Small things by the Audreys / You can listen to the song here

  • Abstract Macro Photography – Landscapes Peeling paint on wood left to decay on the grounds of an old industrial Warehouse

  • It’s fall for many of us including myself; though in Australia it’s spring right now right? Flower folded from a 15×15mm piece of paper (coloured by hand before folding). Blue butterfly folded from a 5×5mm piece of paper. For a better idea of scale: Also available at Zazzle I made these some time back, but felt too lazy to take pictures then. But now I have to clear my workspace and decided to take this before putting them away. Taken with an Olympus FE-340 My origami calendar / / / Works by Category Featured/Popular Early Works [pre-university] / Origami / Drawings,Paintings and Graphics / Abstract Photography / Guessing Games Flowers, Trees and Plants / Water and Waterscapes / Scenery/Skyscapes / Light, Shadow, and Reflections / Still Life Living Creatures / Human Portrait Japanfluence / Canada / Europe / / / /

  • In honour of the 11th day of the 11th month; the day that recalls the end of World War I, I fold 11 poppies from 15×15mm pieces of paper. The cross is also made from paper. Remembrance Day – also know as Poppy Day, Armistice Day or Veterans Day – is a day to commemorate the sacrifice of members of the armed forces and of civilians in times of war, specifically since the First World War. It is observed on 11 November to recall the end of World War I on that date in 1918. Source: Wikipedia The poppy’s significance to Remembrance Day is a result of Canadian military physician John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders Fields”. This poem has also been adapted as a song: In Flanders fields the poppies blow / Between the crosses, row on row / That mark our place; and in the sky / The larks, still bravely singing, fly / Scarce heard ‘mid the guns below. We are the Dead. Short days ago / We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow / Loved and were loved, and now we lie / In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe / To you from failing hands we throw / The torch; be yours to hold it high. / If ye break faith with us who die / We shall not sleep / Though poppies grow / In Flanders fields. For a better idea of scale: / Taken Nov. 4, 2009 with an Olympus FE-340 / / / / Also available at Zazzle

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