View allAll Photos Tagged Combing

Before it really rained!

at the monterey bay aquarium

Vintage inspired ornamental comb. This hair dressing embodies the feeling of the 30’s-40’s decades, it measures a little over 3 inches. The green leaves show the ramifications and markings that we see in nature, the 4 red and glossy cherries look delicious.

 

The price shown on this item is for 1 ornamental comb. The comb measures 3.1 inches.

 

www.shop.meandolly.com/product.php?id_product=8

Dead comb jelly on the beach in Oceanside

Description: Comb grave in Little Cemetery in Overton Co., Tenn.

 

Date: June 3, 2014

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Livingston Q - Little Cem 10

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

The hilly country to the west of Buxton is typical Dark Peak moorland rising to over 500m above sea level. Moors such as Combs Moss are wide, treeless expanses of heather, reeds, sedges and tussock grass suitable only for sheep-grazing and grouse-shooting. The rocks, Millstone Grit sandstones and shales, are largely covered by thick deposits of peat. This is view of one of a number of "Edges" in this area

  

Using a wool comb [flick.com] the wool is prepared for spinning.

 

Swedish Day 2008

Good Templar Park

Geneva, Illinois

6-15-2008

Monument on the north side of the sanctuary at Bishops Tachbrook commemorating Comb Wagstaffe (d.1668).

 

St Chad's at Bishops Tachbrook dates largely from the Decorated and early Perpendicular periods, but is far older in origin with some traces of Norman work. It was restored in 1855 when the chancel was rebuilt.

 

Inside the church has a fine set of Victorian windows by several different makers, including an early piece by Morris & Co and a fine east window by Heaton, Butler & Bayne commemorating Sir Charles Kingsley (author of 'The Water Babies') whose wife lived and died locally.

 

There are also several wall monuments from the Baroque period, the most notable being that adorned with swags and putti commemorating Sir Thomas Wagstaffe.

 

This fine church is normally kept locked outside of services.

Kushi Matsuri at Yasui Konpiragu Shrine

A Comb Wrasse (Coris picta). Burrill Rocks, Ulladulla, NSW

Description: Wiley Sandrs' comb grave, DeKalb Co., Tenn.

 

Date: July 1, 2014

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Campaign Q - Wiley Sandrs comb 7 - image improved by John Waggoner

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Hericium coralloides (formerly H. ramosum). All of these were on the same log, white ones younger.

Rock Bridge state park

Description: Comb grave in Franklin Cemetery, Fentress Co., Tenn.

 

Date: Aug 13, 2012

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Jamestown Q - Franklin Cem 1

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Looking down along Comb Wash from the cross canyon of the San Juan River through Comb Ridge, in the bright mid-day sun. Exposures of the Navajo Blanket formation are visible along the opposite ridge. Better larger.

 

(Img0268_DM201105_226_1117_11) © All rights reserved.

Models wear traditional hairstyles and costumes from throughout history. Old combs are offered at the shrine.

Office Manager Darla Combs of the Physics Department on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on October 23, 2019. (Jay Grabiec)

© All Rights Reserved.

Please don't paste flashy images and other medallions in the comment section.

 

Some Site: Comb Duck (Sarkidiornis melanotos) is a widespread breeding resident in India. Locally called Nakta, this bird is found in large freshwater wetlands. They tend to prefer places that are away from human settlements. Both sexes have black bills with the males showing a comb on top. Males (75 cm) are almost one and half times the size of the females (55 cm).

Description: Comb grave in Chapel Hill Cemetery in Overton Co., Tenn.

 

Date: May 12, 2013

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Obey City Q - Chapel Hill Cem 4

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

A representative soil profile of the Combs soil series. (Soil Survey of New River Gorge National River, West Virginia; by Wendy Noll and James Bell, Natural Resources Conservation Service)

 

The Combs series consists of very deep, well drained, alluvial soils on flood plains and terrace treads along rivers and major streams. Most areas are nearly level or gently sloping with slopes of 0 to 4 percent, but range to as much as 25 percent on riverbanks and risers.

 

TAXONOMIC CLASS: Coarse-loamy, mixed, active, mesic Fluventic Hapludolls

 

USE AND VEGETATION: Nearly all areas are cleared and used for growing cultivated crops and pasture. Crops include corn, small grains, tobacco, hay, and garden or truck crops. Native vegetation was a mixed mesophytic hardwood forest interspaced with cane breaks.

 

DISTRIBUTION AND EXTENT: The Cumberland-Allegheny Plateau in the Northern and Southern Appalachian Ridges and Valleys, and the Blue Ridge in Kentucky, Virginia, and possibly West Virginia.

 

Solum thickness is more than 40 inches. Thickness of the mollic epipedon ranges from 10 to 24 inches. The soil ranges from moderately acid to neutral throughout. Coarse fragments are commonly lacking but range up to 15 percent.

 

For additional information about the survey area, visit:

www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/west_virginia/...

 

For a detailed soil description, visit:

soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/C/COMBS.html

 

For acreage and geographic distribution, visit:

casoilresource.lawr.ucdavis.edu/see/#combs

 

Description: Comb graves in Old Baptist Cemetery, Grundy Co., Tenn.

 

Date: February 18, 2014

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Alto Q - Old Baptist Cem 5

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Description: Comb graves in Andrew Cemetery in Overton Co., Tenn.

 

Date: January 30, 2012

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Hilham Q - Andrew Cem 1

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Description: Comb grave of Susan Scarbrough in Houlette Cemetery, Cumberland Co., Tenn.

 

Date: April 7, 2013

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Pleasant Hill Q - Houlette Cem 2

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Silver plated combs for the Bride and Bridesmaids

We enjoyed seeing the Comb-crested Jacana or Lotus birds walking on the Lotus leaves on the South Alligator River, Kakadu.

  

This is a little hut that is at the bottom of the field where I live. It has been abandoned for years as far as I know. Only thing that happens there now is the kids playing hide and seek

I had a few goes at this bird on different days and finally crept a bit closer without it flying to the other side of the lagoon.

The blue eyeshadow I can't find described in any of my guides?

Peak District National Park

think this was one of my favorite parts of the aquarium.

 

also really liked the ocean sunfish. but couldn't really get any decent photos.

Left:

Bone, France, 12th or 13th century

 

Right:

Ivory, southern Italy, 11th or 12th century

 

Liturgical combs were decorated combs, usually of ivory or bone, used in preparing the priest for the Mass. The ritual combing of priests' hair may have begun when Christianity became the Roman state religion early in the 4th century AD. They were still being made in the 12th century; and references to their use appear in ecclesiastical rituals until the 16th century.

 

The Cloisters Collection

Metropolitan Museum of Art

NYC

Afro comb exhibit at the Fitzwilliam museum in Cambridge

Description: Comb graves in Chapel Hill Cemetery in Overton Co., Tenn.

 

Date: May 12, 2013

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Obey City Q - Chapel Hill Cem 2

 

Ordering Information To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Description: Comb graves in Cash Cemetery, Coffee Co., Tenn.

 

Date: February 18, 2014

 

Creator: Dr. Richard Finch

 

Collection name: Richard C. Finch Folk Graves Digital Photograph Collection

 

Historical note: Comb graves are a type of covered grave that are often called "tent graves." The length of the grave was covered by rocks or other materials that look like the gabled roof or comb of a building. They were popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries. It is conjectured that these graves were covered to protect them from either weather or animals, or perhaps both. While comb graves can be found in other southern states, the Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee has the highest concentration of these types of graves.

 

Accession number: 2013-022

 

Owning Institution: Tennessee State Library and Archives

 

ID#: Alto Q - Cash Cem 6

 

Ordering Information: To order a digital reproduction of this item, please send our order form at www.tn.gov/tsla/dwg/ImageOrderForm.pdf to Public Services, Tennessee State Library & Archives, 403 7th Ave. N., Nashville, TN 37243-0312, or email to photoorders.tsla@tn.gov. Further ordering information can be found at the bottom of the page at the following location under Imaging Services Forms: www.tn.gov/tsla/forms.htm#imaging.

 

Copyright: While TSLA houses an item, it does not necessarily hold the copyright on the item, nor may it be able to determine if the item is still protected under current copyright law. Users are solely responsible for determining the existence of such instances and for obtaining any other permissions and paying associated fees, that may be necessary for the intended use.

 

Just ... an ordinary comb.

 

B&W conversion, lith print treatment and green toning in Photoshop.

This empty comb was used for brood. the darker comb in the middle housed bee larva, while the outer yellow areas stored honey and pollen used to feed the larva.

I made a custom pearl hair comb for someone, so i had a left over black comb base and this is what i used it for.

 

I think it's pretty neat.

Comb Jelly spreads out to dine- As this comb jelly drifts on the currents, it spreads two broad lobes out like nets to catch food, tiny prey sltick to the lobes, like flies to a spider's web. Then the food's swept by fine, little hairs toward the center to the comb jelly's waiting mouth.

Going to get my hair done tomorrow so I thought I'd take some tools.

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