View allAll Photos Tagged Wrapper
This foil is part of a candy wrapper, so the visible cut
is less than 2 cm.
I'm thanking everyone for viewing, faving and commenting on my photo.
Outfit - Candydoll - Sissy
Hair - Truth
Tree - Dust Bunny
Wrapping - Astralia & Second Spaces
Puppers - Rezz Room
Mesh Head - Genus Classic
Peaceful harbor in Georgetown, SC, with the backdrop of smokestacks of International Paper, one of the largest (if not the largest) paper mills in the world. I kind of like how the smoke envelopes the boat and the overall contrast between serene beauty and industrial ugliness.
I will be traveling again for the next week, without much time for flickr. Дорогие фликр-друзья в Питере: еЕсли у вас есть желание что-нибудь поснимать вместе, дайте мне знать.
Qui veut des bonbons? De petites douceurs au parfum Cerise, Fraise, Citron ou Menthe, enveloppées dans du papier à la couleur correspondant au fruit associé. Mais pas de chance pour vous d'en avoir car il ne me reste plus que les papiers qui les enveloppent à mettre à la poubelle. #Macro #MacroMondays #Trash
Vibrant wrappers from Quality Street.. The film is cellulose-based and derived from wood pulp. It breaks down in a compost bin within a few weeks. In the meantime used for a photo..
Candy wrappers
Copyright 2005 Ron Diorio
Just launched a new blog:
A photograghic imagination
Today's topic: Lowbrow art
October 7-30 I will be one of five artists in a group show.
Positive Focus Gallery: Soul Witness
(selections from Anytown)
111 Front Street
Gallery #215
DUMBO, Brooklyn
Wrapper is a permanent work of art by Jacqueline Poncelet, made especially to clad the new building and perimeter wall next to Edgware Road (Circle line) Tube station.
Sponsors
COSMIC DUST//Holly Outfit @ ANTHEM
Wearing
Yomi//Zyra Hair
Lobotomy//Asphyx Corset Piercing
Insomnia Angel/Christmas Ornament Earrings
Secret Poses//Wrapping Day (Gift @ Anthem)
Wrapper is a permanent work of art by Jacqueline Poncelet, made especially to clad the new building and perimeter wall next to Edgware Road (Circle line) Tube station.
A close-up of the packaged Hermes. I have used this plaster cast copy of the head of the Olympian Hermes for many years as my photographic punching ball. Before that, and for decades, students of drawing have used (and abused) this sculpture. I am in all likelihood continuing the abuse. I have wrapped the image of God. Keeping him warm and alive under a protective aluminium foil? Hiding or even denying his presence? Manipulating, packaging and turning him into a commodity, into a creation of mine? Alternatively, did he die, or even, choose to hide? Coming again like a thief in the night when I won't expect it? Is he closer to me than my jugular? Is the wrapping for my own protection? This is the punching ball, and its reach is not limited to photography.
Crazy Tuesday - Close-up Packaging
Thomas Tunnock Limited, commonly known as Tunnock's, is a confectionery company based in Uddingston, Scotland.
The Tunnock's Teacake is a sweet food often served with a cup of tea or coffee. It was developed by Sir Boyd Tunnock in 1956. The product consists of a small round shortbread biscuit covered with a dome of Italian meringue, a whipped egg white concoction similar to marshmallow, although somewhat lighter in texture. This is then encased in a thin layer of milk chocolate and wrapped in a red and silver foil paper for the milk chocolate variety.
Easy to recycle if all your packaging is biodegradable.
Red Squirrel at the Irish Photography Woodland Hide, Mountmellick, Co. Laois.
Macro/Close up of the foil and holder of a Ferrero Rocher Chocolate over a wrapper of a Cella Chocolate Covered Cherry.
Yes, I ate them both!!
Nikon 18-55mm @ 50mm with 20mm extension tube.
Image measures 1 3/4" across.
For Crazy Tuesday
Theme: Close Look at Packaging
A representation of the Queen’s coronation dress, made entirely from sweet wrappers! It has been made by voluntary community arts organisation, Peterborough Creative Action, who support and develop local art projects to highlight the needs of vulnerable groups.
“This project is about the unwrapping of people’s memories through the creation of a ‘coronation dress’. The vibrant colours represent how people remember colourful things from their past’”.
Displayed at Peterborough City Hospital
Sunlight household soap was introduced by the British company Lever Brothers in 1884. It was the world's first packaged, branded laundry soap.Designed for washing clothes and general household use, the success of the product led to the name for the company's village for its workers, Port Sunlight. The soap formula was invented by a Bolton chemist named William Hough Watson, who also became an early business partner. Watson's process created a new soap, using glycerin and vegetable oils such as palm oil rather than tallow (animal fats). William Lever and his brother James Darcy Lever invested in Watson's soap invention and its initial success came from offering bars of cut, wrapped, and branded soap in his father's grocery shop. This was an early labour-saving device for the housewife as prior to this, commercially made soap was bought in long bars. Sunlight soap was eventually supplanted by modern products made from synthetically produced detergents rather than naturally derived soaps. from Wikipedia
Wightwick Manor, Wolverhampton, West Midlands