View allAll Photos Tagged FakeFood,
CHAMPI:
Please...can someone help me? I don't want to be stir-fried
and the wok pan's lid is so heavy
Smile on Saturday: Fake food
The foods are made of plastic presented at a department store in Japan so that people can look and order them beforehand if they don't want to make them themselves.....and they look real!!!
For: Smile on... Saturday!
Theme: FakeFood
Un grand merci pour vos favoris, commentaires et encouragements toujours très appréciés.
Many thanks for your much appreciated favorites and comments.
Tiny fast food lunch for the Smile on Saturday group, challenge teeny-tiny. Extremely low calorie!
Area shown is about 1.5 inches square.
"smile on saturday"
"Fake Food"
With heartfelt and genuine thanks for your kind visit. Have a wonderful and beautiful day, be well, keep your eyes open, appreciate the beauty surrounding you, enjoy creating, stay safe and laugh often! ❤️❤️❤️
Manche meinen, ich wäre ‘Fake Food’, was für ein Unsinn. Ich bin doch durch und durch echt, ein schneidiger Bursche, nicht wahr ? 😊
Some people think I'm "fake food", what nonsense. I am real through and through, I am a dashing fellow, am I not ? 😊
For Smile on Saturday: FAKE FOOD
The colors are so great but it leaves a plastic taste. You can see the plastic mold seam on the blueberries.
Smile On Saturday-Fake Food
These little treats are actually erasers. Thanks for the fabulous comments, everyone. The furniture was loaned to me by my Lalaloopsy Bitsy Buttons. 😄
I took this photo for the Smile on Saturday theme "Fake Food". As I live in a wine region fake grapes were an obvious choice and as the vineyards around here are often located on steep and rocky slopes I put the grapes (and the winegrower frog) on some rocks for this photo.
HSoS !
Smile on Saturday - "FAKE FOOD"
I had trouble finding fake food so I improvised. Eat all you want, no calories in paper!
I ransacked my house, where do I get "fake food" from. In my daughter's room I suddenly saw it. In her bed were two "edible" soft toys.
Ik heb mijn huis overhoop gehaald, waar haal ik "fake food" vandaan. In de kamer van mijn dochter zag ik het ineens voor me. In haar bed lagen twee "eetbare" knuffels.
This is from a birthday card. Each piece of sushi is approximately 1.75 in x .75 in. You can see a bigger version of the card here: flic.kr/p/2oUzgAe
For Macro Mondays theme "Egg"
Peaches symbolizing immortality (or the wish for a long and healthy life) are a common symbol in Chinese art, appearing in depictions or descriptions in a number of fables, paintings, and other forms of art, often in association with thematically similar iconography, such as certain deities or immortals.
This antique ceramic peach is a water dropper, to be found on a scholar’s table, used to mix ink for calligraphy.
A delicious piece of cake that clearly is made for eating :)
This is a tiny eraser from my Japanese collection.
HsoS
Auswahlfoto:
Für:“Smile on Saturday“ am 12.08.2023.
Thema:“FAKE FOOT“. (Gefälschtes Essen)
😄Thanks for views,faves and comments😄
Für "Smile on Saturday"
Thema "Fake Food" am 12.08.2023.
A "Happy Smile on Saturday" 😊
and a good weekend for all of you.
Thank you for all your views, faves and comments.
Smile on saturday - fake food.
The Museu de Portimão is otherwise known as the "Sardine Museum". It is located inside one of the main fish canning factories in Portimão. The factory used to be a real tycoon in the processing of fish, in particular sardines and tuna.
My attempt at the "Smile on Saturday" theme "fake food"
Shot with a Carl Zeiss "S-Sonnar 62 mm F 2.5" lens on a Canon EOS R5.
I am not real.
I'm theatre.
(Lady Gaga)
This 'mandarin' might look familiar? That's because I also used it for the theme 'Fake Food' in my group Smile on Saturday! :-)... it's a magnet... 😉
Looking close... on Friday! - NOT A REAL ONE
(photo by Freya, edit by me)
Thanks for views, faves and comments!
“An apple a day keeps the doctor away” – old English proverb, coined in its current form in 1913.
If you follow my photostream, you may know that I collect 1:12 size miniatures, some of which have featured in past themes in the "Looking Close on Friday" and "Smile on Saturday" groups. I also publish a chapter of a novelised story every Sunday, called "Life at Cavendish Mews" www.flickr.com/photos/40262251@N03/albums/72157715517132727 which focuses on the lives of two women: Lettice Chetwynd, interior designer and daughter of a Viscount, and Edith, her maid, set in London exactly a century ago today. Each week I upload a photo of my miniatures set up in a realistic setting accompanied by the latest chapter, often referred to lovingly by some of my devoted followers as my "Lettice stories". The intention is that one day I would like to publish them with the chapters accompanied by my photographic images. What you don’t know is that I often take photos of selected objects in isolation in the scene with the intention to use as smaller vignettes in my photo book as well. This comes from a Lettice Chetwynd Cavendish Mews story, when Lettice visits her friends Margot and Dickie Channon a pair of newlyweds at their Regency country house, "Chi an Treth" (Cornish for "Beach House") in Penzance. These apples are the centrepiece on the breakfast table the day after Lettice makes a surprise discovery in a storage cupboard in the old house.
The theme for "Smile on Saturday" for the 12th of August is "fake food". Being a miniatures collector, I am spoiled for choice, as I have a dizzying array of foods. Maria even chose one of my Cavendish Mews images for her gallery of examples for this theme, featuring a roast dinner made by English artisan Frances Knight, who used to be a chef, but now turns her talents to realistic 1:12 miniature food stuffs for collectors like me. I decided to choose these apples because they are so realistic looking. Made of polymer clay and then painted by hand, they are made by a 1:12 miniature specialist in Germany. The comport in which they stand is spun of real glass and was made by Beautifully Handmade Miniatures in Kettering in England. The toast rack, egg cruet set, cruet set and coffee pot were made by Warwick Miniatures in Ireland, who are well known for the quality and detail applied to their pieces. The eggs and the toast slices come from Kathleen Knight’s Doll House Shop in the United Kingdom. I hope you like my choice for the theme this week, and that it makes you smile.