View allAll Photos Tagged egg_house
For Crazy Tuesday ......... Theme " Things That Go Together "
The eggs belong in the Egg House .........
Located within the Empire State Plaza, The Egg's unique sculptural curves define Albany's skyline. The Egg houses two theatres, the Kitty Carlisle Hart Theatre and the intimate Lewis A. Swyer Theatre, both offering superb lighting and acoustics. Enjoy comfortable seating and free parking. Comedy, dance, music, film, theatre, and family events can all be seen at The Egg.
Hallo, wir sind wieder da ...
Wir wünschen einen guten Start in die neue Woche ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
🍁🍃🍂😊♥ 😎🎉🎃🚜👏🙋♂️
Ich hab mir einen Pfannkuchen bestellt ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍳🏠
Tivi und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠
🍟🎃
👋😋🍁🍃🍂🎃🍁🍃🍂🎃🍁🍃🍂🎃🍁🍃🍂🎃🍁🍃🍂🎃🍁🍃🍂🎃
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... ✨🌺🌺✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🌺🌺✨Kindergartenkinder ...
🏠🍳✨🌺🌺✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🌺🌺✨🍳🏠
😎🍨💖🎉🎈♥😊🍁🍃🍂☀🙋♂️
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Bärli . Schafi . Sanrike . Milina . Jocko . Anne-Moni und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
#1
💖💋💦
Ich fahr jetzt nach Haus🏠
und ruhe mich aus ...
Schönen Abend ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Milina und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
💌🐄💋
💖☀️💕💋✨💖💥 🔥😘😘🔥🍓🐝☎🐞
🙋♀️💕🍓🐝☎💋🐞💋💖🔥💖✨🐜🙏✨🐾🐾🌺💦
💋💖🔥🐜🐓🐻🔔☎💣💯💋🔔☎️🎈🌞😘 🌹🌻🌸🐞🌼🌷👖😘🔥💥😘😚😴💤⏰😎💖💨👻💥🔔💣
💥🔔💣💥💖⚡️👓🙏🐭☘️ 🍀🐐🐑☘👉💖💦🙋♂️
✨🐤🎵🎶💌🐄💋
🚲🎵🎶💤💤
🎃🌻💌😘✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨😘💌🌻🎃
The Egg
Located within the Empire State Plaza, The Egg's unique sculptural curves define Albany's skyline. The Egg houses two theatres, the Kitty Carlisle Hart Theatre and the intimate Lewis A. Swyer Theatre, both offering superb lighting and acoustics. Enjoy comfortable seating and free parking. Comedy, dance, music, film, theatre, and family events can all be seen at The Egg.
Schönen Abend ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Tivi . Sanrike . Milina und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
🚲🎵🎶💤💤
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Anne-Moni und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃🚑
🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂 🍂🍂🍂 🍂🍂🍂🍂
🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂🍂 🍂🍂🍂🍂 🍂🍂🍂
💊 💊 💊
💊 💊 💊
Wir wünschen einen schönen Tag ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Tivi und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
🦘
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍳🏠
Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🐻✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🐻🏠🍟🎃🚑
🐻
😆
😊♥🎈🎉💖🍨😎🌹🌻🌼🌷🐤
🙋♂️
www.flickr.com/photos/164289224@N04/53165906165/in/datepo...
www.flickr.com/photos/164289224@N04/53202142397/in/datepo...
Wir wünschen einen schönen Tag ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Tivi mit Sanrike und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
💛❣💔💚💖💥
🍃🍎🍇🍐🌻💕🌻🍐🍇🍎🍃
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍳
Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃🚑
Ich mache eine Pause ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Anne-Moni und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
💋💖
✨🌛✨🌜✨🌛✨🌜✨🌛✨🌜✨
✨🌛✨🌜✨🌛✨🌜✨🌛✨🌜✨
Wir wünschen einen schönen Tag ...
Viele liebe Grüße ... 🍂🎃✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🎃🍂
Sanrike mit Milina und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💣🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk,
ich bin schon mal vorgefahren ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🍳🏠
Sanrike ...
⚒🚑‼🆘
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
www.flickr.com/photos/164289224@N04/53165906165/in/datepo...
.
www.flickr.com/photos/164289224@N04/53202142397/in/datepo...
Egg House on Mashkov Street is a building in the Basmanny district of the Central Administrative District of Moscow, located at Mashkov Street, 1. The house was built by architect Sergey Tkachenko in 2000-2002.
Tkachenko developed the egg-shaped building project in 1998, when the Moscow Patriarchate decided to build a maternity hospital in Bethlehem, which was supposed to be very popular on the eve of the new millennium. The construction of a maternity hospital was soon abandoned, but the project of a smaller egg-house was offered to investors on the site on the corner of Ermolaevsky Lane and Malaya Bronnaya Street, and after the refusal, to the customer of the project for the reconstruction of buildings on Mashkov Street. He was interested in increasing the footage of the residential complex under construction, but the high-altitude restriction did not allow this, and Tkachenko proposed to build an egg-house on a small area between the main house and the neighboring kindergarten and place exclusive apartments there.
In the accompanying papers for 1999, the project was designated as “reconstruction of a 2-3-storey building with the construction of an 8-storey extension and an outbuilding with a total area of 6472 sq. m. with an underground parking lot for 34 cars”, where the main building of the complex was called the “extension”, and the egg-house corresponded to the “outbuilding”. Information about the project investor was not disclosed, the construction project was sponsored by the Korina Charity Fund, and the Benefit Engineering company was the contractor. The complex was built in 2000-2002, the sale of apartments and offices in an 8-story building paid off the investor’s expenses, but the apartments in the outbuilding were never settled. Soon after the completion of the construction, the apartments were offered to Nikas Safronov for $1.2 million (the artist refused to buy), in 2008 the declared value of the object reached a historic high of $12 million, in 2014 the egg-house was on sale for 359 million rubles.
Шалтай-Болтай Льюиса Кэролла вполне мог бы обитать здесь. Проход к дому закрыт. Излюбленное место для селфи.
Дом построен из кирпича на металлическом каркасе в 2002 году по проекту мастерской Сергея Ткаченко. Жилая площадь 342 кв.м.
Great selfie place.
Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens is a decorative arts museum in Washington, D.C., United States. The former residence of businesswoman, socialite, philanthropist and collector Marjorie Merriweather Post, Hillwood is known for its large decorative arts collection that focuses heavily on the House of Romanov, including Fabergé eggs. Other highlights are 18th- and 19th-century French art and one of the country's finest orchid collections.
Hallo, wir sind in der Pfannkuchen-Mühle ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🍰🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍰🍳🏠
Sanrike ...
🎃🏠🍰🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🍰🏠🎃
🍮🍞🍵
🙏🔔🔔🙏
Irgendwo müssen die Mädchen wohl den alte Film "Ben Hur"
gesehen haben, oder woher kommt mir die Szene so bekannt vor ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Sanrike . Milina und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
🙏🙏🌺
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Sanrike . Milina . Anne-Moni und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Sanrike mit Tivi und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃🚑
💋💖💋💖
Gift of Emperator Nicholas || to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna for Easter of 1906.
Moscow, 1904-1906. House of Faberge.
Gold, silver, onyx, glass, enamel by guilloche, partition enamel, enamel painting.
Moskow Kremlin Museums
...Life in the Big City is amazing... It's quite accidental and unexpected to visit a magnificent exhibition...
Hallo, wir sind auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Sanrike mit Tivi und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
👓🐰👓🐇👓🐰👓
Hallo, wir sind auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🏠
Anne-Moni mit Tivi und Kindergartenkinder ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳🚑✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃
❓🌿💦🐫🐫🐫
Scutigera coleoptrata, also known as the house centipede, is a species of centipede that is typically yellowish-grey and has up to 15 pairs of long legs.
S. coleoptrata is indigenous to the Mediterranean region, but it has spread through much of Europe, Asia, North America and South America. It has also been introduced to Australia.
The body of an adult Scutigera coleoptrata is typically 25 to 35 mm (1.0 to 1.4 in) in length, although larger specimens are sometimes encountered. Up to 15 pairs of long legs are attached to the rigid body.
Together with the antennae,
they give the centipede an appearance of being 75 to 100 mm (3 to 4 in) in length. The delicate legs enable it to reach surprising speeds of up to 0.4 meters per second (1.3 ft/s) running across floors, up walls and along ceilings. Its body is yellowish-grey and has three dark dorsal stripes running down its length; the legs also have dark stripes.
S. coleoptrata has developed automimicry in that its tail-like hind legs present the appearance of antennae. When the centipede is at rest, it is not easy to tell its cranial end from its caudal end.
Unlike most other centipedes, house centipedes and their close relatives have well-developed faceted eyes.
House centipedes live anywhere from three to seven years, depending on the environment. They can start breeding in their third year. To begin mating, the male and female circle around each other. They initiate contact with their antennae. The male deposits his sperm on the ground and the female then uses it to fertilize her eggs.
House centipedes feed on spiders, bed bugs, termites, cockroaches, silverfish, ants, and other household arthropods. They administer venom through forcipules. These are not part of their mandibles, so strictly speaking they sting rather than bite. They are mostly nocturnal hunters. Despite their developed eyes, they seem to rely mostly on their antennae when hunting. Their antennae are sensitive to both smells and tactile information. They use both their mandibles and their legs for holding prey. This way they can deal with several small insects at the same time. To capture prey, they either jump onto it or use their legs in a technique described as "lassoing". Using their legs to beat prey has also been described.
S. coleoptrata can live its entire life inside a building, usually on the ground levels of homes. Many homeowners may be unsettled by house centipedes due to their speed and appearance. However, they pose little to no threat towards humans, and are often beneficial as they catch other, more harmful pests, such as cockroaches. They are not aggressive and usually flee when disturbed or revealed from cover. Sting attempts are therefore rare unless the centipede is cornered or aggressively handled. Its small forcipules have difficulty penetrating skin, and even successful stings produce only mild, localized pain and swelling, similar to a bee sting. Allergic reactions to centipede stings have been reported, but these are rare; most stings heal quickly and without complication. (Wikipedia)
Hallo, wir sind in der Pfannkuchen-Mühle ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍳
Sanrike und Tivi ...
🎃🍟🏠🍳✨🚜🍁🍂🍃💖*‿*💖🍃🍂🍁🚜✨🍳🏠🍟🎃🚑
💦🔥
House sparrow
Species of bird
The house sparrow (Passer domesticus) is a bird of the sparrow family Passeridae, found in most parts of the world. It is a small bird that has a typical length of 16 cm (6.3 in) and a mass of 24–39.5 g (0.85–1.39 oz). Females and young birds are coloured pale brown and grey, and males have brighter black, white, and brown markings. One of about 25 species in the genus Passer, the house sparrow is native to most of Europe, the Mediterranean Basin, and a large part of Asia. Its intentional or accidental introductions to many regions, including parts of Australasia, Africa, and the Americas, make it the most widely distributed wild bird.
Quick Facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
The house sparrow is strongly associated with human habitation, and can live in urban or rural settings. Though found in widely varied habitats and climates, it typically avoids extensive woodlands, grasslands, polar regions, and hot, dry deserts far away from human development. For sustenance, the house sparrow routinely feeds at home and public bird feeding stations, but naturally feeds on the seeds of grains, flowering plants and weeds. However, it is an opportunistic, omnivorous eater, and commonly catches insects, their larvae, caterpillars, invertebrates and many other natural foods.
Because of its numbers, ubiquity, and association with human settlements, the house sparrow is culturally prominent. It is extensively, and usually unsuccessfully, persecuted as an agricultural pest. It has also often been kept as a pet, as well as being a food item and a symbol of lust, sexual potency, commonness, and vulgarity. Though it is widespread and abundant, its numbers have declined in some areas. The animal's conservation status is listed as least concern on the IUCN Red List.
An audio recording of a house sparrow
Description
Measurements and shape
The house sparrow is typically about 16 cm (6.3 in) long, ranging from 14 to 18 cm (5.5 to 7.1 in). The house sparrow is a compact bird with a full chest and a large, rounded head. Its bill is stout and conical with a culmen length of 1.1–1.5 cm (0.43–0.59 in), strongly built as an adaptation for eating seeds. Its tail is short, at 5.2–6.5 cm (2.0–2.6 in) long. The wing chord is 6.7–8.9 cm (2.6–3.5 in), and the tarsus is 1.6–2.5 cm (0.63–0.98 in). Wingspan ranges from 19–25 centimetres (7.5–9.8 in).
In mass, the house sparrow ranges from 24 to 39.5 g (0.85 to 1.39 oz). Females usually are slightly smaller than males. The median mass on the European continent for both sexes is about 30 g (1.1 oz), and in more southerly subspecies is around 26 g (0.92 oz). Younger birds are smaller, males are larger during the winter, and females are larger during the breeding season. Birds at higher latitudes, colder climates, and sometimes higher altitudes are larger (under Bergmann's rule), both between and within subspecies.
Plumage
The plumage of the house sparrow is mostly different shades of grey and brown. The sexes exhibit strong dimorphism: the female is mostly buffish above and below, while the male has boldly coloured head markings, a reddish back, and grey underparts. The male has a dark grey crown from the top of its bill to its back, and chestnut brown flanking its crown on the sides of its head. It has black around its bill, on its throat, and on the spaces between its bill and eyes (lores). It has a small white stripe between the lores and crown and small white spots immediately behind the eyes (postoculars), with black patches below and above them. The underparts are pale grey or white, as are the cheeks, ear coverts, and stripes at the base of the head. The upper back and mantle are a warm brown, with broad black streaks, while the lower back, rump and upper tail coverts are greyish brown.
The male is duller in fresh nonbreeding plumage, with whitish tips on many feathers. Wear and preening expose many of the bright brown and black markings, including most of the black throat and chest patch, called the "bib" or "badge". The badge is variable in width and general size, and may signal social status or fitness. This hypothesis has led to a "veritable 'cottage industry'" of studies, which have only conclusively shown that patches increase in size with age. The male's bill is dark grey, but black in the breeding season.
Heads of a male (left) and an immature or female (right)
The female has no black markings or grey crown. Its upperparts and head are brown with darker streaks around the mantle and a distinct pale supercilium. Its underparts are pale grey-brown. The female's bill is brownish-grey and becomes darker in breeding plumage approaching the black of the male's bill.
Juveniles are similar to the adult female, but deeper brown below and paler above, with paler and less defined supercilia. Juveniles have broader buff feather edges, and tend to have looser, scruffier plumage, like moulting adults. Juvenile males tend to have darker throats and white postoculars like adult males, while juvenile females tend to have white throats. However, juveniles cannot be reliably sexed by plumage: some juvenile males lack any markings of the adult male, and some juvenile females have male features. The bills of young birds are light yellow to straw, paler than the female's bill. Immature males have paler versions of the adult male's markings, which can be very indistinct in fresh plumage. By their first breeding season, young birds generally are indistinguishable from other adults, though they may still be paler during their first year.
Voice
Most house sparrow vocalisations are variations on its short and frequent chirping call. Transcribed as chirrup, tschilp, or philip, this note is made as a contact call by flocking or resting birds; or by males to proclaim nest ownership and invite pairing. In the breeding season, the male gives this call repetitively, with emphasis and speed, but not much rhythm, forming what is described either as a song or an "ecstatic call" similar to a song. Young birds also give a true song, especially in captivity, a warbling similar to that of the European greenfinch.
Aggressive males give a trilled version of their call, transcribed as "chur-chur-r-r-it-it-it-it". This call is also used by females in the breeding season, to establish dominance over males while displacing them to feed young or incubate eggs. House sparrows give a nasal alarm call, the basic sound of which is transcribed as quer, and a shrill chree call in great distress. Another vocalisation is the "appeasement call", a soft quee given to inhibit aggression, usually given between birds of a mated pair. These vocalisations are not unique to the house sparrow, but are shared, with small variations, by all sparrows.
Variation
An immature of the Indian subspecies (P. d. indicus) in Rajasthan, India
Some variation is seen in the 12 subspecies of house sparrows, which are divided into two groups, the Oriental P. d. indicus group, and the Palaearctic P. d. domesticus group. Birds of the P. d. domesticus group have grey cheeks, while P. d. indicus group birds have white cheeks, as well as bright colouration on the crown, a smaller bill, and a longer black bib. The subspecies P. d. tingitanus differs little from the nominate subspecies, except in the worn breeding plumage of the male, in which the head is speckled with black and underparts are paler. P. d. balearoibericus is slightly paler than the nominate, but darker than P. d. bibilicus. P. d. bibilicus is paler than most subspecies, but has the grey cheeks of P. d. domesticus group birds. The similar P. d. persicus is paler and smaller, and P. d. niloticus is nearly identical but smaller. Of the less widespread P. d. indicus group subspecies, P. d. hyrcanus is larger than P. d. indicus, P. d. hufufae is paler, P. d. bactrianus is larger and paler, and P. d. parkini is larger and darker with more black on the breast than any other subspecies.
Identification
The house sparrow can be confused with a number of other seed-eating birds, especially its relatives in the genus Passer. Many of these relatives are smaller, with an appearance that is neater or "cuter", as with the Dead Sea sparrow. The light brown-coloured female can often not be distinguished from other females, and is nearly identical to those of the Spanish and Italian sparrows. The Eurasian tree sparrow is smaller and slenderer with a chestnut crown and a black patch on each cheek. The male Spanish sparrow and Italian sparrow are distinguished by their chestnut crowns. The Sind sparrow is very similar but smaller, with less black on the male's throat and a distinct pale supercilium on the female.
Taxonomy and systematics
Names
The house sparrow was among the first animals to be given a scientific name in the modern system of biological classification, since it was described by Carl Linnaeus, in the 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. It was described from a type specimen collected in Sweden, with the name Fringilla domestica. Later, the genus name Fringilla came to be used only for the common chaffinch and its relatives, and the house sparrow has usually been placed in the genus Passer created by French zoologist Mathurin Jacques Brisson in 1760.
The bird's scientific name and its usual English name have the same meaning. The Latin word passer, like the English word "sparrow", is a term for small active birds, coming from a root word referring to speed. The Latin word domesticus means "belonging to the house", like the common name a reference to its association with humans. The house sparrow is also called by a number of alternative English names, including English sparrow, chiefly in North America; and Indian sparrow or Indian house sparrow, for the birds of the Indian subcontinent and Central Asia. Dialectal names include sparr, sparrer, spadger, spadgick, and philip, mainly in southern England; spug and spuggy, mainly in northern England; spur and sprig, mainly in Scotland; and spatzie or spotsie, from the German Spatz, in North America.
Serangoon Road
Little India / Singapore
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**Hmmpff Spring cleaning...Where to start? ~Have a nice EGGTrollie Day! 🌱🍄🌱
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Charles' EGGIE Troll ~by Charles' Creature Cabinet (NL) **Eggie Moss Tan 7cm Tiny (Chunky) BJD 🌱🍄
Hand made Egg Cocoon (brown) by Fairy Fragilities' Murjani Kusumobroto (NL)
Hand made mohair wig & tiny outfit by Weedollywears (US)
Hallo, wir sind wieder auf der Kartbahn in Winterswijk ...
Einen schönen Tag ... 🏠🍳🚑✨🚜💖*‿*💖🚜✨🚑🍳
Kindergartenkinder ...
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