View allAll Photos Tagged botanic
Fibre reinforced plastic Botanical Sculpture 'Hybrid Series' by Azuma Makoto (Japan) install at the Cloud Forest, Gardens by the Bay.
Created by Mr Yen, paper cutter.
Blogged: www.allthingspaper.net/2012/08/mr-yen-botanical-paper-cut...
"Botanical Steampunk"
For a friend.;-)
She gave me the stones and wire and....creative license! She loved my "Artemus" Necklace....so the flow of the piece is similar to that one...but the gears work with stones to form a flower garden. It is "blooming" with gold rutilated quart,citrine,pyrite,olive quartz,fw pearls and garnets.The colors alternate between warm and cool...the right side being summer....the left fall. The netted wire not only forms the base of the collar..but on the "fall" side..forms a leaf.
I have said it before...I'll say it again....My favorite projects are the ones I create for friends.;-)
Canon EOS 5D Mark II + EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM
Taking pictures of plants sometimes could be a really frustrating thing. It's not like working with people, big environments or urban landscapes, I find it a really hard subject. But last sunday I went to the Botanical Garden with some classmates, and I enjoyed it a lot. I've uploaded more pictures and wrote something more on my blog.
Pretty chuffed how this one came out. Looks like a studio shot or something, but it was taken using available light at Edinburghs Botanic Garden.
I have wanted to get down hear for some time. This is the Botanic Gardens Station, opened 10th August 1896. This station was the first to close on 6th February 1939. and the entire line closed on 5th October 1964 after just 68 years.
Saturday, 29 June 2024
3019 operating the 1530hrs Bangor Portadown line service from Bangor to Lisburn.
3011 is operating the 1545hrs from Lisburn to Bangor.
© Finbarr O'Neill
A cable car plies between Lambton Quay, Victoria University and Kelburn Lookout at the top end of the Wellington Botanic Gardens. This shot was captured on a fine autumn afternoon, looking down towards the CBD and harbour.
Ventnor Botanic Garden lies in the remarkable microclimate at the heart of the famous ‘Undercliff.’ This unique garden is protected from the cold northerly winds by chalk downs.
botanical chart found in the trash by my dad - framed with strips of trim from the home store, hung with ribbon (blogged)
As part of Adelaide's celebration of the Australian Bicentenary the conservatory was constructed in 1987 and opened in late 1989. The building was designed by local architect Guy Maron and has won awards for its design, engineering and landscaping. It is 100 metres (328 ft) long, 47 metres (154 ft) wide and 27 metres (89 ft) high making it the largest single span conservatory in the southern hemisphere. The conservatory houses at risk or endangered tropical rainforest plants from northern Australia, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia and south Pacific Islands. The conservatory is often referred to as "The Pasty" (or "The Crystal Pasty") by locals, because of its resemblance to a massive semicircular stuffed pastry.