View allAll Photos Tagged Recycling
Creating a painting with some kuler palettes I made earlier. The colors were extracted from other generative art with kuler and then used in a new generative painting application.
Inspired (and then recycled) by the portrait 'bag' by Hendrik Kerstens
that I saw at the National Portrait Gallery - London.
Gentleman with an impressive collection of plastic and possibly paper that he will be able to sell for recycling. Bacolod City, Philippines.
Not sure which bin the truck should be in, meanwhile the guy is actually looking to see what he can salvage to sell. Bacolod City, Philippines.
Able Body Sales refurbished and repainted by Amrep in 2013. this was taken before CNG tanks or signboards were attached. note the barn doors, probably the only existing natural gas truck them
new (2013) Mack LEU chassis
Saw this recycling drop off point from across a parking lot, with the mid-day sun hitting the colors of the cans. It was begging to be captured.
Mushrooms growing on a dead Blue Oak tree. Lots of moss and even seedlings coming up in crevasses. Nature's recycling committee.
It's good to recycle! At first processing I thought this was a seemingly bad shot. So I got creative with it!...or at least tried.
Near where I work, there is a large truck full of recycled soda cans in front of a local volunteer fire department that I always drive past. I've been wanting to stop and take a photo of it for a long time, but today I finally did. I was inspired by the old-school lettering on the sign to process the image with vintage tones and lots of grain. I think it works.
overlooks Las Cruces, New Mexico
this huge bird is made completely of trash
edited with picnik for Holidays Around The World
Created by Sharon Turvey, modified and folded by Glenn Sapaden out of three US dollar bills. Folded in recognition of Earth Day.
RECYCLED AN OLD BOOK
Won a comp wth this one yesterday...original idea from Kirsty and an AftH class .....just my pastel snowflake version
People do a lots of things for living. Here the man collects used syringes from various hospitals, break the niddles and sell the plastic portion for recycling. In the process of doing so he earns some money.
A bale of mashed beverage cans that have been collected and sold to an aluminum recycling company. In this view we're seeing most of one side of a single bale. The bales -- each weighing about 700 pounds -- are stacked up in preparation for being sent to a smelting plant, where they'll be converted back to pure aluminum ingots. It -- the recycling, that is -- is a long and winding road. Mundane a business as it is, though, it provides opportunities for money to be made at various stages along the way. And eventually results in a cleaner environment, thank goodness.
Incidentally, based on a really rough estimate, one such bale may contain as many as 20,000 cans.