Squash 

107 creative works found

  • Bouteilles en Provence
    by Cvail73

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    This shot was taken on St Tropez’s market, in provence, just before lunch..

  • the right to dream
    by greeneyedlady

    honey / you have walked / into a nest of vipers~

  • Market Bounty
    by Bob Shupe

    US$3.42–US$28.50

  • The Racket Player
    by wildago

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    Gouache painting by Wildago

  • this was my very 1st attempt doing a still life, contrary to popular believe shooting one of these arent as easy as it might seem, have to get that lighting and setting on camera just right. this has not been touched up with any program , if you would like larger print, please contact me, for some reason this says isnt big enough for anything other then a card, thanks

  • This is a take on the popular Halloween icon, the Jack-o-Lantern. Halloween is a huge holiday around these parts and I certainly go ALL out when it comes to the festivities. My favorite Halloween icon has to be the Jack-o-Lantern (a.k.a. “carved pumpkin”). It is a tradition in our house to carve several of these round pieces of awesomeness each year. This was inspired by a pumpkin that my brother, Mike, carved last year (hence the name). This one is for T-Shirt Revolution’s 24 Hour T-Shirt Challenge: Inspired by Triangles. For this challenge, I tried to “think outside the triangle.” :) If you are a t-shirt designer, join the revolution: / CREATION INFORMATION Medium: Vector Art, T-Shirt Design. Technique: Vector Art, Digital Brush/Painting Technique, Photo Manipulation. Tools: Photoshop CS3, and my brain.

  • Poised
    by Jonah Gautier

    US$3.85–US$102.60

  • BUTTER NUT SQUASH STILL LIFE Original is acrylic on canvas W 12” x H 9” , not framed. $ 180.00 (negotiable) ORIGINAL FOR SALE at romanowskipaul@gmail.com

  • Watercolor on board, colored pencil. I’ve painted my impression of a ghost. She inhabits the ruins described i the next paragraph. Long dead, her hair is coiled in whorls mimiking the female squash blossom and marking a girl as unmarried. She’s thinking about her village, the dark ruins of which her ghost inhabits, and shown behind her. The turquoise – tinted concentric circles across her face and hair are raindrops in puddles, the passage of time, and teardrops. She’s wrapped in warm blanket spun of good memories. This is the story of where she came from: / I once visited a secluded site in New Mexico, located on privately held ranchland and perched on a high cliff. This place was a secret withheld from outsiders who might disrespect through ignorance or vandalize through malice. Centuries ago the People settled here, nesting like eagles between a turquoise sky and blood red earth. There was the ever-present aroma of pinion, sage, and cooking fires. At day’s end, they must have relaxed in the low doorways, speaking softly, watching the sunset. How they must have enjoyed the cool evening breezes gusting upward from the valley and fragrant with the breath of the land. Today, this place is the silent, crumbling abode of ghosts. I followed a rock-strewn path curving past the site and around the cliff, ending a shallow, wide mouthed cave. Invisible from below, it was hidden by a screen of massive boulders and tall pines. On the arching walls were barely discernable symbols, rendered in black, ochre, and white pigments. I felt intrusive, and after leaving tobacco as acknowledgement and respect, retreated back down the trail. One image stayed with me, and it is located in the lower right of this painting. Ive been told these pictoglyphs are the sun and four directions. The tadpoles beneath swim upward, a common symbol for water in this desert area. An agricultural people, this tribe would have been interested in weather for crops and a good harvest. To our modern eyes the symbol is also remarkably like a the fertilzation of a human egg. The motifs are found all over the southwest, carved and painted. Many are thousands of years old, but nobody had microscopes back then. So isnt it interesting that these pictures for abundance and fertility of crop, animal and human look so much like sperm and an egg in the process of dividing cells? Text and image copyright Helena Nelson -Reed. Please don’t use without written permission.

  • Watercolor… This is the cover image for a calendar featuring art inspired by Native Peoples, Mosty of the images focus on lifeways of the Lakota nation, because I used to spend summers there during the 90’s in a cultural exchange program with Sinte Gleska university and later, visiting freinds. During those years people were kind enough to share some history and stories. This image is the only one from another region. The location is southern New Mexico, and the girl depicted is a ghost. These place was memorable for me. If you are the kind of individual who stands in an ancient or historical location and wonders about the people who built and inhabited it centuries before, you’‘ll understand how the land and structures speak to those who listen.

  • It’s another plastic zen thing / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

  • squash dads nose
    by jack01

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    jack and daddy having a smooching moment

  • a bee on one of my many yellow squash flowers doing his work, so all my yellow squahes will grow up to maturity

  • Pumpkin
    by bchrisdesigns

    US$25.94

    I love pumpkins! Pumpkins remind me of fall, of pie, and of celebration! Bring in the fall with a pumpkin on your chest! Or, buy one for your “pumpkin”. :) / CREATION INFORMATION Medium: Vector Art, T-Shirt Design. Technique: Vector Art based on stock image. Tools: Photoshop CS3, and my brain. Stock used: Pumpkin Note: The stock used for this image was inspirational in the re-creation of this design. This design was re-done entirely of vector points to re-create a higher resolution and a crisper look. None of the original stock remains in this version.

  • Painted Gourd
    by Rachel Leigh

    US$3.42–US$91.20

  • Peace
    by thejay

    US$23.94

    Peace to the insects i keep sending into the next realm, but i have a tendency to walk with my feet on the ground.

  • Colorful digital painting by Alejandro Silveira. / Legends series by Alejandro

  • Super liers factory
    by Alejandro Silveira

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    Colorful digital painting by Alejandro Silveira. / Legends series. / Big version.

  • tomatos & squash
    by daniels

    US$3.42–US$91.20

    watercolor of tomatos and squash in the garden.

  • Autumn Holiday Still life
    by ItsAboutLight

    US$3.99–US$106.40

    A wicker basket, orange candles, autumn leaves and autumn vegetables come together in this warm inviting still life.

  • who squashed stringer?
    by citizen "KHAN"

    he was still around at 23.00. gmt. yesterday. did someone squash him, or did he accidently press the wrong button? i haven’t se…

    he was still around at 23.00. gmt. yesterday. did someone squash him, or did he accidently press the wrong button? i haven’t seen any news reports about natural disasters in tasmania. but then again i don’t suppose natural disasters in tasmania would make the news. stringer, were you just another tasmanian natural disaster? i suspect he’s waiting for us to pine…

  • Cheerfulness
    by Bonnie Taylor Barry

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    This flower is the blossom of a crook neck squash in Daddy’s garden. Even the veggies have their lovely flowers in the bouquet of life! Here’s to good health for all!

  • Homegrown
    by Bonnie Taylor Barry

    US$4.28–US$114.00

    My 86 year old father has been gardening all his life. He’s a natural at it and continues to provide his family with homegrown produce every year—watermelons, tomatoes, potatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and squash. This one weighed in at 22 pounds! Mama does all the processing and cooking and works just as much magic in the kitchen as she and Daddy work in the garden where she’s the flower Queen and he’s the Produce King! When I see Daddy in this picture, I think of the verse from the Psalms: “They are planted in the house of the Lord, they flourish in the courts of our God. They still bring forth fruit in old age, they are ever full of sap and green.” (Psalm 92:13-14) Postscript: Daddy’s a firm believer in not wasting. When he goes to eat out at a restaurant, he often keeps the seeds of fruits and vegetables he really likes. He dries them and then plants them in little cups before putting them in the rich soil of his garden. This summer he had a bumper crop of the sweetest watermelons which he grew from the seeds he got from the Chinese restaurant where he and Mama like to eat. I can see in his and Mama’s attitudes some of the reasons why they’ve been tagged “the greatest generation.” Daddy served in the U.S. Navy during WWII. He was on the USS Yorktown when it was torpedoed and sank.

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