View allAll Photos Tagged bindi
Bindi is a young and very talented cattle dog. She is stopping this run-away steer in its tracks. It is amazing to me to see how a young forty pound dog can pack so much power.
Usha (उषा) means the first ray of light from the rising sun.
And that's the arm of Kriti Monga from Tumeric Design –
a typographic doyenne – who wears it on her sleeve.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
Usha (उषा) means the first ray of light from the rising sun.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
Sakhi (सखी) is an endearing term for a girl, a friend and a confidante in Hindi.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
I really wasn’t going to buy anymore books!!!!
But then I saw this sign “Ten Thousand Books For Sale”
I couldn’t just walk by….could I?!!!!
I am delighted that I didn’t ((^_^))
Firozi (फिरोजी) = turquoise blue in Hindi/Urdu.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
Babe (बेब) – phonetically from English and
peppered through Hindi conversations when hotties on the radar.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
"This is a purple salvia, Bindi," Millie Solitaire tells her baby daughter. "It's pretty, and it smells lovely. Just like you, kitty-pie!" Bindi stares in wonder at the flower and starts to purr. "Well, Bindi," Mom tells her, "maybe purple will be your favorite color! One of these days you'll have to pick one, you know."
Bindi sue irwin (born 24 july 1998) is an australian actress, television presenter, and daughter of the crocodile hunter star steve irwin and terri irwin..The typically fresh-faced teen looks super glam in this stunning selfie..
Source – Download
Bindi Irwin –...
Artist: Bharti Kher [India]
The term bindi is derived from bindu, the Sanskrit word for a dot or a point, and also carries the meaning of the numeral zero. The bindi in India is traditionally a mark of pigment applied to the forehead of men and women and is associated with the Hindu symbol of the 'third eye'. When worn by women in the customary colour of red, the bindi symbolises marriage. In recent times it has become a decorative item, worn by unmarried girls and women of other religions. Bindis today are seen in many colours and designs and are commercially manufactured.
Bharti Kher uses the ready-made bindi as a central motif of her practice. This tiny object is used as a means of transforming objects and surfaces such as this dying elephant covered in white bindi. The elephant is revered across Asia and is often a symbol of dignity, intelligence and strength. In Buddhism the white elephant is associated with wisdom. Historically, the elephant was used to carry kings, princes and nobleman and is thus associated with royalty. Across the Buddhist South and South-East Asia, the elephant features in processions and ceremonies. In India, the important and popular Hindu deity Ganesha is shown with an elephant's head. Kher uses the symbolism of a dying elephant as a means to contemplate the potentially destructive effects of popular culture, mass media and consumerism on the culture of India. The Asian elephant is an endangered species, and it is estimated that in less than 50 years there will no longer be a viable population of this species on the sub-continent.
Location: GoMA [Gallery of Modern Art], Camera: Canon 30d, Lens: 10-22mm@ 11mm, Film: ISO 400, Shutter: 1/60, Aperture: f.4.5.
these are the new friends that Bindi met at the garden centre..the gnooms were friendly and had no problem to pose with her.
And here is Bindi outside the Dinorwig Quarry Hospital
The Dinorwig Quarry Hospital is now a museum housing some of the original equipment from the 1800's
It even has its original X-Ray Machine.
This old hospital in Llanberis was for the men who worked at the Dinorwig Quarry in the 19th and 20th centuries.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
Sakhi (सखी) is an endearing term for a girl, a friend and a confidante in Hindi.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
Poor girls have been extremely neglected recently but I assured them my love for them is forever! Shelly (twofuzzysisters) hope you enjoy seeing them again! : )
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific
A bindi (from Sanskrit bindu, meaning "a drop, small particle, dot") is a forehead decoration worn in South Asia (particularly India)[1] and Southeast Asia, not to be confused with a tilaka. Traditionally it is a dot of red colour applied in the center of the forehead close to the eyebrows, but it can also consist of a sign or piece of jewelry worn at this location. (wiki)
model : sarah
mua : chi iglesias
natural light
Usha (उषा) means the first ray of light from the rising sun.
From my recent Typocentric: Bazaar workshop at the UnBox Festival in Delhi. Hosted with Abishek Ghate and Rajesh Dahiya of Co-Design. We had global participants construct typographic forms from objects commonly found in Indian markets – buttons, bindis, decorative mirrors, candles, textile embellishments, match-boxes, etc. Much fun on a crazy tight time-frame.
Check out my full blog post on Random Specific