View allAll Photos Tagged Shells
Some of my shell collection, arranged roughly by type and size on my rug. Reminds me a bit of Ernst Haeckel for some reason.
Pleistocene fossil microshell collected at Kahe Beach Park, Oahu, Hawaii (photographed with a Dino-Lite digital microscope)
Another shell from my small collection, again whilst waiting for spring to arrive so that I could go out and learn how to use my first digital camera.
These shells were breakfast and lunch for the seagulls. Big part of the beach was shattered with the shells.
Shell badge on a tank in Norway, could do with a touch up of paint but the textures of the fading paint work attracted my eye.
Little shells on a rock at St. Bees head, Cumbria. The picture should actually be rotated 90 degrees CW, to be the right way up. These wee guys where grouped together in lots of the indents.
Wilmington North Carolina - is awesome - not only for the warm water and gorgeous sandy beaches but the shells are amazingly coloured
I got a day to myself today. Hubs took the girl to the beach, and she brought these home. I'm glad the sand is by her bed and not mine. :)
Shell Adirondack Chair, NEW Eco-Friendly Outdoor Furniture. This outdoor friendly chair requires no painting or finishing and is constructed from an environmentally friendly recycled material. In Mahogany color. Seat size 22x19, overall dimensions 32x37x42.
Value: $259
Donor: Advanced Furniture Outfitters
The Shell Collection, which is specially designed for FueraDentro by the dutch designer Jan des Bouvrie, consists of two chairs, a bank sofa, four tables and a sunbed. The fibers of the chairs, sofa and sunbed are made of Batyline and the frames are made of stainless steel. This combination of materials makes the SHELL collection ideal for outdoor use.
The most notable characteristics of the SHELL collection is the rounded shape of the shelllike bucket seat, which brings a stunning sense of shelter. The seatings are carried out in a coaxial structured Batyline® fibre. The frames are made of electro-polished stainless steel and the tabletops are glass.
Several Decades ago, Shell put out a number of series of cards. They also sold albums to put these cards in. Everytime you went to Shell for petrol, or anything else, they gave you some cards. The idea was to collect the whole lot, and generally they were most obliging in allowing you to go through the box, to get the cards you were missing.