Whistle Wall Art

219 creative works found

  • This little girl has a pretty song to share with the whistle bird…. This print is from original pen drawing, digitally coloured.

  • The intense stare of a Whistling Kite as it stands defiant over its dinner.

  • A boy and a bird, both singing their song to each other. I have tried this, whistling back to the birds I hear, but they never respond. =P Just a simple little thing I did, kind of a different style but I like it. Was fun to do. =D / Used sepia ink for the characters and border, then added a texture and the music notes in the background with Photoshop. Hope you like it! =3

  • A flock of Black Bellied Whistling ducks came to town this week and boy do they keep busy flying around in circles… Captured in flight at Wakodahatchee wetlands in Delray Beach, Florida.

  • Prairie Marmots….. UNTOUCHED IMAGE AND STRAIGHT FROM THE CAMERA ! Generally large ground squirrels, those most often referred to as marmots tend to live in mountainous areas such as the Alps, Carpathians, Tatra, and Pyrenees in Europe, the Rockies and the Sierra Nevada in the United States, and Northern Canada. However, the groundhog is also properly called a marmot, while the similarly-sized but more social prairie dog is not classified in the genus Marmota but in the related genus Cynomys. Marmots typically live in burrows, and hibernate there through the winter. Most marmots are highly social, and use loud whistles to communicate with one another, especially when alarmed. Marmots mainly eat greens. They eat many types of grasses, berries, lichens, mosses, roots and flowers.

  • This little guy seemed more curious than anything. He alternated between standing up for a photo op and dropping down to lick minerals from the soil. Location: Mt Evans Wilderness Area

  • From the “Yesteryear” Exhibition. / Hair & Makeup by Kristy Bassett. / Styling by Ben Fornarino. / Model is Kate. / Shot at Tin Cat Cafe, Adelaide SA.

  • This old woman was selling little pottery whistles from a flat-bottomed boat in the river in Hoi An (Vietnam) just near the famous Japanese bridge. I bought one, and mimed asking permission to take her photo. She seemed happy for me to do so, and in fact gave me another whistle, with much hand-clasping and smiles.

  • The resident Whistling Kite moves in for a feed at the Alice Springs Desert Park. Desert Park, Alice Springs / Northern Territory / Australia site www.thedirtygardener.org . Canon 5D MKII / Canon 70-200 f/2.8L IS USM + 2.0x Extender at 255mm / 1/1250 sec at f/10 / ISO 640 / Exposure Bias -1/3 EV / Auto Exposure Bracketing 0 EV / Exposure Program – Aperture Priority / Metering Mode – Spot / Dimensions – 5616×3744 / Crop – 3829×2553 Post Processing / - Adjustments in Lightroom 2.2

  • Life/Death; Black/White; Sing/Brood…whistling in the graveyard. Digital collage combined with traditional cut & paste.

  • Taken as the River Duddon passes through Whistling Green in the Lake District in Cumbria. The rain was falling and yet the water here was clear enough to see the bottom in places.

  • I met Cody with a Metropolitan Policeman on his back. The Washington, D.C. police force now has a team of horses that carry some of its officers through the streets of the city. It does enable the mounted police to move faster than they would on foot, and to maneuver in and out of places a patrol car cannot go. I asked the policeman what they use on horseback as a siren, and he said a whistle. A loud whistle. But this puzzled me for I did not know horses could blow whistles. Thank you to the group “The Woman Photographer” for featuring this photograph Camera: Canon Rebel XTi 400D This photograph is “as is” from the camera, there was no post processing

  • Two White-Faced Whistling Ducks having a mutual grooming session. Birdworld, Farnham, Surrey. Canon EOS 50D with Canon EF 70-200mm L IS f/4 handheld

  • This is the view along the River Duddon in Cumbria. This spot in the lake District is called Whistling Green and lies opposite Ulpha’s wonderful post office and village store. Despite the blue sky, you can see how hard the wind was blowing by the ripples on the rivers surface.

  • The ‘medicine’ of ELK ( or wapiti in Shawnee) is stamina, endurance, strength and nobility. Few elk are ever loners or solitary, they congregate in large herds and reflect the need for companionship, support and community. Majestic forest king with antlers high, / Mighty strength belongs to you. / Fill my mind with common sense / to do the things that I must do. / Lead me in paths of quiet calm / where I connect with other minds, / whose souls, like mine, yearn for the truth / and worship higher powers divine. / Where paths to spirit are unique / to every woman and each man, / and all respect each person’s way / of following an unvoiced plan. DJ Conway Photographic merge of several photos, wacom pen tracks and editing in photoshop7. Dedicated to “Charging Elk” with The Elk hunt Song

  • This is the River Duddon flowing through the valley that carries it’s name. This stone bridge is a favoured spot for the “leapers” into the water in the summer. This wonderful spot in the Lake District, is where Whistling Green meets Ulpha over the bridge. Converted into albumen in PSP

  • Taken at the Knoxville Zoo, April 2009 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The Black-bellied Whistling-duck (Dendrocygna autumnalis), formerly also called Black-bellied Tree Duck, is a whistling-duck that breeds from the southernmost United States and tropical Central to south-central South America. In the USA, it can be found year-round in parts of southeast Texas, and seasonally in southeast Arizona, and Louisiana’s Gulf Coast. It is a rare breeder in such disparate locations as Florida, Arkansas, Georgia and South Carolina. It is widely known as “pijije” (also “pixixi” or “pichichi”), “chiriría” or “sirirí” in Latin America, though this can also refer to other whistling-ducks and a qualifyer such as “ala blanca” or “aliblanco” (“white-winged”) is usually added to signify this species. In Mexico, it is also called pato maízal (“cornfield duck”) due to its habit of visiting such fields after harvest. And since it is one of only two whistling-duck species native to North America, it is occasionally just known as “the whistling duck” in the southern USA. The Black-bellied Whistling-duck is an unusual species among North American waterfowl. With its long legs, peculiar appearance and odd habits, it was described by one early American ornithologist[citation needed] as “most un-duck-like”. Its numbers are increasing in North America. Thank you for viewing my work!!! If you like what you see here, have a peek at the rest of my work. Maybe you will find a nice gift here for that special occasion!! Please note that the markup on my work is only 10%. Copyright 2009 © Julie Alexander. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. My work does NOT belong to the public domain. It may not be used in any way, shape or form without my prior written permission.

  • This is a marmot – it’s basically an alpine groundhog. They have have many nicknames – Whistle Pigs, Brake Line Chewers, Those Big Rats. They’re all marmots. The name marmot comes from the Latin Mures Montani or “mountain mouse.” They are from the Order Rodentia, so they are actually big rats. As rats go, these are pretty amazing. They live above tree line in the the Rockies and Sierras in the US, and in the European Alps. They spend their brief summers eating and mating – in fact, a male marmot can have 3, 4, or more mating partners. They then hibernate through the long alpine winter. Marmots are considered to be one of the few altruistic species on this planet – they selflessly keep themselves in danger to warn others of potential danger. The name Whistle Pig comes from their habit of whistling/squeaking/hooting out a warning to warn their neighbors of danger. Marmots are an at risk species due to climate change. Yellow-bellied Marmot (Marmota flaviventris) / Mt Evans Wilderness Area, CO / Sony a700 / Sigma 3 /2.8+1.4TC ISO200, 1/1600sec, f/2.8

  • The Whistling Kite, an Australian native eagle, that can also be found in New Caledonia and New Guinea. Called the “whistling kite” because of the loud whistling call it makes, often while in flight. This one photographed on the edge of Lake Cooribah, Noosa Northshore, Queensland. They feed mostly on live small mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, amphibians, crustaceans, insects and sometimes dead animals or carrion. Like most eagles, they are the masters of the sky in soaring effortlessly and diving for the kill. This shot was just before a dive, he was applying the brakes as he spotted a meal. Canon 50D, 400mm. Available Large, and best viewed large!

  • The engine starts it’s journey to position itself in front of the waiting carriages at the Severn Valley Railway in Bridgnorth in Shropshire. Converted into a pinhole black and white. Best viewed large

  • Taken at Gorge Wildlife Park,Adelaide Hills,South Australia,with Canon 40D and EF 70-300mm IS,lens.

  • You wondering… Acrylic and chalk pastel on 9olb watercolor paper. / © AmandaGWright 2009.

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 333,000 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…

Whistle T-Shirts

Whistle Journal Entries

Whistle Writing

Whistle Calendars