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This fish measures around 25mm total length.
Canon 100mm f/2.8 macro. f/11, ISO 400, with off-camera flash.
While on Holiday with the family in Shell Island we watched an amazing sunset... who needs photo editing when they're captured just like this!
I decided to add some of my favorite non-origami photos I've taken. I took this photo at the San Diego Zoo.
I have come back to North Bay Rowing Club after many breaks. A morning spent on the river is magical and a reminder of everything that can be right in my world, if I just get out there and do it. This is a Maas 24, the slender and slightly longer cousin of the Maas Aero I rowed in high school. This is a shot from last year as I haven't had a chance to take pictures this time around... but the swans are back, for sure.
Shell Aero Team and the T-6 Texan:
The 2009 VNA Airshow at Witham Field, located in Stuart, Florida: Saturday, November 14, 2009:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witham_Field
www.youtube.com/results?search_query=VNA+Airshow+2009+Stu...
I was driving 3 of my drunken friends when Sindre suddenly found out that he had to make a stop at a Shell station in Kristiansand to take a shower :P
Shell GTL required a B2B brochure for their fuels extolling the technical benefits and high spec of GTL. The brochure was designed with a slip cover, prints in four specials and uses a distinct tactile stock for the cover.
A nice Minneapolis-Moline "D" that I found on an auction site. The sheller has been well maintained and the ad said it it still ran very well.
The Shell Centre, in London, is one of the two central offices, and serves as the registered address, of oil major Shell (the other, its main headquarters, is in The Hague), a prominent feature on the South Bank of the River Thames near County Hall, and now forms the backdrop to the London Eye.
The original Shell Centre comprised the tower building and three now demolished adjoining nine storey wings (collectively formerly known as the "Upstream Building").
The Shell Centre, in London, is one of the two central offices, and serves as the registered address, of oil major Shell (the other, its main headquarters, is in The Hague). It is located on Belvedere Road in the London Borough of Lambeth. It is a prominent feature on the South Bank of the River Thames near County Hall, and now forms the backdrop to the London Eye.
The original Shell Centre comprised the tower building and three now demolished adjoining nine storey wings (collectively formerly known as the "Upstream Building"). The original development also included a separate building known as the "Downstream Building", which was separated from the Upstream Building by the railway viaduct between Charing Cross and Waterloo East.
The Downstream Building was disposed of by Shell in the 1990s, and is now a block of residential apartments known as the White House, and has been heightened by a storey.
The Shell Grotto is an ornate subterranean passageway in Margate, Kent. Almost all the surface area of the walls and roof is covered in mosaics created entirely of seashells, totalling about 2,000 square feet (190 m2) of mosaic, or 4.6 million shells. It was discovered in 1835 but its age remains unknown. The grotto is a Grade I listed building and is open to the public.
We use mainly 4 type of shell to make the parts.
1. MOP (mother of peral)
2. Abalone Shell (black shell)
3. Purple Shell
4. Pink Shell
Our design is In-House, very special shape & easy to matach with any type of items such as keychain for handbag, jewellery, charms & so on.
We provide full range of shapes:-
1. Cross
2. Flower (rose, tulipe, lily)
3. The knot (ribbbon, knot)
4. Animals (butterfly, horse, owl, sheep, cat)
Inquiry: info@kafuco.com
Online shop: www.kafuco.com
Sumonster Production Shots, Shell Ridge Productions
(This is actually me) :)
Photo By : Mike Eisenberg
Shells from Sanibel Island, Florida, the most wonderful place in the world for collecting. Because the Island runs east-west, unlike most islands that run north-south, it acts like a giant scoop, resulting in the most amazing amount and variety of shells. The shells make a lovely twinkling sound as they tumble in the surf, and then wash up on shore, collecting ankle-deep, as I've captured here.
I use these shells, along with other natural elements, in my jewelry designs.