View allAll Photos Tagged flutter
Photographer: Laurel Guido
Model: Alexandra Pinheiro
Hair and Makeup Artist: Alexandra Pinheiro with Relatum Models and New Icon Model Mangement
Assistant: Patrick Arvia
You can move her butterflies by her magic wand. Only Ariel, Belle, and Cinderella were made.
2002-2003
Bought off ebay
A female Common Mormon (papilio polytes) captured on a hibiscus in the backyard. This female is in the stichius form that mimics the inedible Common Rose closely. There are other forms of this butterfly like the romulus that mimic the other Red-bodied Swallowtail, the Crimson Rose. In India, this butterfly is considered as the classic example of Batesian Mimicry in which edible species resemble unpalatable butterflies in order to escape being eaten by predators.
2048 x 2048 pixel image for the iPad’s 2048 x 1536 pixel retina display.
Designed to complement the iPad iOS 7 & 8 lock screens, also works on an iPhone, just centre the image horizontally after selecting it.
Typeface: Dreamy Script
Caught this little hummingbird flying above me. This is the only picture I got of him/her. They are so majestic but super fast!
PASADENA, Calif. - A Pasadena resident spreads her wings in celebration for the Dia de los Muertos Monarch Butterfly Festival. The City of Pasadena, Friends of Washington Park, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service hosted the festival in celebration of the role monarch butterflies play in Hispanic culture and our environment. Photo by Hazel Rodriguez/USFWS.
A Sapphire Flutterer (Rhyothemis triangularis) in Pasir Ris Park.
Explore with me in my blog: A Return To Pasir Ris Park and Mangrove Forest
*Note: More pics of Dragonflies and Damselflies in my Dragonflies and Damselflies Album.
Fluttering Beauty.....
This beautiful butterfly is a "Tiger Shallow Tail". This was shot at Harpers Ferry during our anniversary. There we found flowering bushes covered by these beautiful friends. It was a memorable day.
This picture was featured in EXPLORE - Thanks to everyone for your valuable comments and invitations. Thanks A lot...
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Whittington Castle is a castle in northern Shropshire, owned and managed by the Whittington Castle Preservation Fund. The castle was originally a motte-and-bailey castle, but this was replaced in the 13th century by one with buildings around a courtyard whose exterior wall was the curtain wall of the inner bailey. As a castle of the Welsh Marches, it was built on the border of Wales and England very close to the historic fort of Old Oswestry.
The Whittington Castle is unique in that it is the only castle in the UK which is owned and managed by a community of local residents. Today, it is a popular castle for tourism for its physical attraction.
In 2003, a historical and archaeological investigation by Peter Brown and Peter King identified that the outer bailey of the castle had been two elaborate gardens and surrounded by water in the 14th century. This discovery was significant in that it proved the advanced state (as compared to those of the French or Flemish) of English gardening habits. The "lavish" garden was installed by one of the FitzWarin family. The viewing mound in the centre may be the oldest of its type yet discovered in England