View allAll Photos Tagged Curly
Handmade for kids or older collectors. Created by Joelle's Dolls, www.etsy.com/listing/4532004435/doll-with-brown-skin-curl...
"Curly" McDaniels at Cahners Publishing Co. (where I drew for Design News Mag) found I did a "little" painting ... He asked me to "retouch" his mural ... a "little".
365 Days in Colour ... orange.
After I retired I worked for a while in the kitchen of "The Coffee Club", an Australian chain of coffee shops. Nearly every meal was garnished with a little arrangement of curly carrot, parsley and a halved cherry tomato. This is the close-up. Below is the meal.
I love hoyas: such wonderful and unique little waxy flowers. But so slow growing. I have an ordinary hoya from a cutting i took in the 80s, and it's still quite small, as houseplants grow.
I took this shot with my little purse Olympus when visiting a friend. I was surprised that she said "No" when I asked her for a cutting. I guess she doesn't like to hurt her plants by cutting them.....or because it grows so slowly she didn't want to further retard it.
Arrested Motion
Bomit
Brooklyn Street Art
C-Monster
ekosystem
Graffoto
Huffington Post
Hyperallergic
Melrose&Fairfax
Streets Dept
Tag This Philly
This grafted cutting is well on it's way towards a Sokan style Bonsai.
My biggest challenge will be keeping the wife away from it when she is out looking for some salad garnish.
I chose my Curly Leaves Pattern to weave, for the Etsy Beadweavers- Heal the World June Challenge, as it fits perfect into these theme and one I was dying to bead.
I chose this design to bring awareness, of what, we can do to protect or natural resources: water, land and trees. Just by recycling and being conservative in our use of these natural resources, will go along way to protecting them and heal those that are close to depletion.
I weaved it in these specific colors blue (water), a light brown (land) and the leaves on this design depicted the trees and vegetation of our beautiful World.
Curly dock, a perennial broadleaf plant, usually grows in wet areas and is frequently associated with overwatering or standing water in low areas. It is found throughout southern Alberta. It stands erect and grows 2 to 5 feet (0.6 to 1.5 m) tall. As a member of the buckwheat family, the plant has a characteristic membranous sheath at the leaf base and usually swollen stem joints (nodes). Leaves are hairless. Stems are often unbranched below the flower head. Leaves are alternate to one another along the stem. The fruiting stem dies back in mid to late summer, and the fruits and stems turn a distinctive rusty brown. New basal rosettes of leaves form in early winter. Curly dock inhabits agricultural land and other disturbed areas. Plants may be poisonous to livestock when ingested in quantity.
Wondering how to help your kids' curls look great without all those tangles and tears? We have a whole batch of how-to tips for the parents of curly kids, and a line of hair care products specially designed for "KRLY Kids"!