View allAll Photos Tagged Miniatures
An overhead view of the proposed model for Singapore's expansion over the next ten to twenty years. The current buildings are in dark gray, on the left; the proposed new office and residential towers are in white.
At the 2008 ACT Miniature Enthusiasts Show.
Blogged about here:
theshoppingsherpa.blogspot.com/2008/03/big-news-at-miniat...
In April, 2019, I visited the Li'l Country Store & Miniature Horse Farm in Ronks, Pennsylvania. I've seen children driving carts pulled by miniature horses.
A beautiful, moonlit miniature castle. Actually pretty big, I think it would have been maybe 5 feet high sitting on the ground. I've always been fascinated by miniatures... I had a dollhouse briefly as a kid, and every time I see one, from a travelling, immensely detailed miniature of the White House to a model railroad to displays like this, I get completely lost in them for a while.
Fixing up parts of the garden today and fell in love with this plant. It's my new outdoor table centrepiece!
Free sculpted stoneware clay. Painted with oxides, underglazes and glazes. Fired in a kiln.
By Marina Lenzino ©Cherry Heart 2013
*sold* on etsy
Free sculpted stoneware clay. Painted with oxides, underglazes and glazes. Fired in a kiln.
By Marina Lenzino ©Cherry Heart 2013
*sold* on etsy
ODC 3 Miniature:
To make this photo I found the background image that had a creative commons license from flickr member Leveretdreaming (No real name given). I pulled it into photoshop and made a few adjustments. I then put a few books in front of my monitor, put photoshop into full screen mode, and set my LED flashlight with the red lights on directly above our miniature jazzman (California Raisin). I put my 50mm f1.8 on my camera, which I rarely use anymore, and played around with the aperture setting until I got the right amount of bokeh in the image on the screen. A couple finishing adjustments, dodge/burns in photoshop and here you have it!
~BV
This series documents the ‘miniatures’ created by my Grandmother. I aimed to capture these tiny shops, markets, pubs and dwellings in a way that may evoke feelings of nostalgia and give insight into ‘how we used to live’, many of her miniature set ups represent a bygone era, home baked bread and tables set for family meals are for many now a thing of the past.
The collection of photographs may appear to be similar to those from a tourist trip, like a record of the places I have visited, and some will look like images from inside a home, holding childhood memories. However the photos explore the years my Gran has dedicated to inventing and constructing another world. I wanted to create a series of images that is playful and could tell a make-believe story but also delves into the idea of memory and loss.
A few weeks ago, I found a tiny miniature rose plant in the street, apparently dropped by the trash collectors. It looked dead--abandoned in its two-inch pot...hardly more than a couple of dried branches with crumbling leaves. I brought it home, repotted it and applied intensive care. It repaid my efforts this week, with a tiny pink rose.
Photographed September 3, 2006 in a residential garden on the northwest side of Ann Arbor.
View my collections on flickr here: Collections
Press "L" for a larger image on black.