View allAll Photos Tagged dink
Dinks in the garden hiding. Managed to see him this time but most times he is much better camouflaged.
Sorry I have not been around much lately. Just been so busy or tired with no time to take pics. Now that the weather is brighter and a little warmer, things will change.
View me here: www.fluidr.com/photos/katiedee OR flickeflu.com/photos/35585734@N07
THANKS FOR LOOKING.....CATCH YOU LATER.....HAVE A NICE WEEK-END
This is my piece for Zeitgeist's seventh annual Shrinky-Dink Invitational Exhibition and Auction.
Shrinky-Dinks are piece of art/ craft made with a sheet of plastic that you draw on/ manipulate then shrink. The end result is the work litterally being shrunk after being baked in an oven.
After years of trying to suppress the memories of high school art classes, in which one teacher in particular pushed shrinky-dinks on us students as though they were crack and she were a dealer, I decided to make shrinky-dinks a positive in my life, not a negative.
Thanks to Brian Yeck for putting this on and making me realise shrinky-dinks can be a good thing.
In this piece she is all shrinky-dink as well as the trees within her top. I drew her on an 8" x 10" piece of plastic and she is now about 4.5" x 3.5"
Dinking around the house, put the Leica 100-400mm on the Lumix GM-5, how funny! This lens dwarfs the little GM-5 but the OIS did well at 1/15 second I think.
"The Adventures of Winky Dink," published by Pines in 1957, based on the CBS TV series "Winky Dink and You," the first interactive TV show. The comic attempts to replicate the audience interaction by asking the reader to connect the dots within certain panels of the story to reveal what happens next. (Although this is issue 75, it was the only issue.) Cover artist unknown.
www.flickr.com/groups/volcans-du-monde/discuss/7215763331...
www.flickr.com/groups/instruments/discuss/721576320548281...
Dinko Fabris rileva nella viola raffigurata sulla fontana di Spinacorona a Napoli (eretta durante il viceregno di Pedro de Toledo, tra il 1532 e il 1553) la "fattura dello strumento musicale, tipicamente cinquecentesco. Siamo tentati anzi di credere che la presenza della viola (o lira) costituisca un indiretto omaggio proprio alla casa natale di un musicista aristocratico come Fabrizio Dentice [Napoli 1539-Napoli 1581]" il cui palazzo - demolito a fine Ottocento - sorgeva non molto distante.
Dink Pop 25 @ Petit Village Day 1 - Thanks to all the great singers ♥
petitevillage.blogspot.com/2025/05/here-we-go-dink-pop-25...
Dorian Dragon
Sings hotter as any dragon
petitevillage.blogspot.com/2024/03/that-was-exciting-and-...