View allAll Photos Tagged Exotics

This morning's sunrise at exotic Eastney

Morocco, Busch Gardens Tampa

A fruit sold in the local market.....don't know what its called...looks exotic ...like charcoal balls with marble inside...not very appetising though !!

Ósumi peninsula, southern Japan

Guava, star fruit, passion fruit, chirimoya and?

This place resembled some tropic island for a little while when the temperature rose to 30 degrees Celsius for a couple of weeks.

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EXOTIC MASQUERADE THEATRICAL COSTUME FASHION SHOW BY NATASHA AT EMPIRE HOTEL AT LINCOLN CENTER, NEW YORK CITY 04112014

DT & Laura at the pool party.

orchid on dark background

The exotic butterfly with exotic color

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Clifton Antique Bike Show

Concept - Jayanti & Winand Singh

Photos - Winand Singh & Vinod Singh for Me We

Makeup - Yohana Yfara

Hair - Wendy Mac Intosh

Styling - Jayanti with Van Dijk

The Kauai Aadheenam Hindu Temple is home to many rare and beautiful plants that the monks tend to lovingly.

 

They are sent these plants from all over the world to be taken care of and preserved in the sacred Pihana-Kalani ("where heaven meets earth"). The monks consider it an honor and a sacred duty.

Had fun creating this short clip of Exotic Graphix cool Volkswagen Beetle which was vinyl wrapped for the Avery Dennison "Wrap Like A King" competition!

Such a cool ride!

Enjoy!

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Coleton Fishacre is a property consisting of a 24-acre (97,000 m2) garden and a house in the Arts and Crafts style, situated in Kingswear, Devon, England. The property has been in the ownership of the National Trust since 1982.

 

The house at Coleton Fishacre was built as a country home for Rupert D'Oyly Carte and his wife, Lady Dorothy Carte, between 1923 and 1926. The architect was Oswald Milne, a former assistant to Edwin Lutyens, who designed the house with the principles of the Arts and Crafts Movement in mind: simplicity of design and quality of craftsmanship. The influence of this older movement notwithstanding, the house is influenced by its own time, especially in its Art Deco interior. The structure is built of local slate rubble with a Delabole slate roof. The design has been twice featured in Country Life magazine: 31 May 1930 and 25 October 2007, the latter of which shows full colour photos of the house (exterior and interior) and the gardens. The property runs down to the sea, where there are some outbuildings.

 

Although built as a country home, Lady Dorothy lived in the house as her primary residence by the later 1920s. After the Cartes' divorce in 1941, their daughter, Bridget D'Oyly Carte, took over the house, which her father, who lived in London, would visit for long weekends. She sold the house in 1949, after his death, to Rowland Smith, owner of the Palace Hotel in Torquay. The house is a Grade II listed building.

 

The garden at Coleton Fishacre runs down a narrow coombe from the house to the sea at Pudcombe Cove. It was originally planted by Lady Dorothy and features rare and exotic plants, some of which are unusual in their ability to grow outside a tropical climate due to the proximity of the Gulf Stream to this part of the coast of Devon. Lady Dorothy was noted for retrieving exotic plant species for the garden during her journeys abroad. The Cartes employed a staff of six to maintain the garden, compared with a staff of four to run the house. The garden is Grade II* listed in the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

@bronsong0mez

@pieceofpower

Um, not sure what the english word for this fruit. It's Markisa in Bahasa Indonesia.

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