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This small Shell House was built in 1754 for picnics and summer parties for friends and family, overlooking the new lake in the heart of the forest.
Hatfield Forest, Essex, England
A lovely white sea shell nestled in the beach sand .... on my dining room table! The shell is actually about 1 1/2 inches ... both sand and shell came from a 1990s visit to Cuba.
Shell Spring, Sapphire Group, Biscuit Basin, far-northwestern Upper Geyser Basin, Yellowstone Hotspot, northwestern Wyoming, USA in August 2011.
The complex of irregular, pustulose geyserite knobs here somewhat resembles the interior of an articulated tridacnid bivalve shell.
Shell Island, also known as Mochras, is a peninsula lying west of Llanbedr in Gwynedd, Wales. It was formed after the River Artro was diverted by the Earl of Winchelsey in 1819 from its previous course where it entered the sea to the south of Shell Island. Prior to this, access to the ancient settlement on the island would have been through the village of Llandanwg, which is now across the estuary.
Shell Montage fabric by Phillip Jacobs, Top made by Gloria Black, Quilting by Martha Steele. This is another one of Gloria's original designs. A good way to use those large prints.
the kids on the island still remember my 365 shell project of last year and often bring me shells.
so... here is ricardo at west bay showing all the great conch he found.
This display of shells and marine things has some obviously wrong items glued in places where I have to imagine the original shell fell off or was pulled off at some point. I don't know who did it, or why, but its pretty weird and adds to my overall delight in this one for sure.