View allAll Photos Tagged flutter
These cuff bracelets are designed by me, and then I cut and etch them using my laser system. I also hand paint them and add Swarovski Crystals to them making them sparkle. If you want to see more of my work, www.getpersonalart.etsy.com also www.getpersonalart.com
From an installation I made recently called Empty Room. This is a photograph of an element called My Mind Breaths. It was a fan with thoughts/feelings/ideas written on bits of paper tied to the front of it. This is a photograph of that.
Google’s Flutter framework for cross-platform app development is quickly becoming a favorite among mobile cross-platform developers, and with good reason. Although Flutter is maturing at a quick pace thanks to Google’s strong support, it still does not enjoy very many third-party developer tools. However, there are still a number of really good Flutter developer tools that aren’t Firebase and in this post, we will take a look ar some of the top tools available at the moment.
She's just adorable...pictured here at 15 months of age.
Mei Lan will turn 2 years old on September 6, 2008.
Pop Art Butterfly public art project
My Pop Art buttefly has been installed on the Upper Falls Greenway as part of the Newton Cultural Development Flutter public art project.
See my Pop Art at www.howiegreen.com
A little sanderling fluttering above the waves on Cleethorpes beach.
billyclapham.co.uk/landscapes/mud-waders-and-an-easter-su...
2048 x 2048 pixel image for the 3rd Generation iPad 2048 x 1536 pixel retina display.
Resized from Apple's Desktop Images for Mountain Lion (OS X 10.8)
Photographer: Laurel Guido
Model: Alexandra Pinheiro
Hair and Makeup Artist: Alexandra Pinheiro with Relatum Models and New Icon Model Mangement
Assistant: Patrick Arvia
www.brisbaneinsects.com/brisbane_dragons/BandedFlutterer.htm
Check out this link for Distribution:
www.lochmantransparencies.com/p14494/graphic-flutterer-dr...
Feminine and pretty, Flutter incorporates die-cut upcycled watercolor paper (from my student work hoarded over the years) on a background of aged paper from a 19th century Art History book that I decoupaged to thicker rag paper and cut into chunky shingles. Ombre ribbon festoons the top and all applied decoration is pinned and therefore could be removed and rearranged. I am working on some cake dummies to help the viewer visualize all my toppers but for now I'm posting these sitting upon my Milk Glass Cake Stand.
I gotta admit, I really was trying for this shot, or something like it. These sulphurs have such nicely colored wings it's a shame that you can't see them when they're perched. So, I spent some time trying to catch one in flight. This is the only one so far that I'll post, and I'll keep trying for better!
Visitors sit at picnic tables below a flag flying at the Torrey Pines Glider Port in La Jolla California
Atrial flutter and atrial fibrillation (AFib) are two types of abnormal heart rhythm. Both conditions can make your heart beat too.
The symptoms are often similar—mainly palpitations and lightheadedness.
Atrial flutter occurs when an extra or early beat starts an abnormal electrical impulse that moves around the right atrium in a circular loop.A person's heartbeat tends to be rapid but regular during atrial flutter.
In atrial fibrillation (or afib), the roaming electrical impulses randomly trigger the AV node, leading to a fast and irregular heartbeat.
The main difference between the two is that atrial flutter often can be cured with radiofrequency ablation, a procedure that destroys the tiny area generating the abnormal electrical impulse but this is not so in atrial fibrillation because of difficulty in locating and destroying all the trouble spots triggering the AV node to cause fast and irregular heartbeat
Once upon a time, little you and I sat and admired all the colourful, jewel-like little bugs.
I know wiser me looks more closely now, for the strangely beautiful in the familiar.
Do you?
Took this about 2 years go, and went hunting in iPhoto after remembering I tried to photograph the orange butterfly without getting up off the rock. Go find it like I did :)
Right now (last week of June) a super-abundant emergence of the rare Regal Fritillary (Speyeria idalia) is occurring in the tallgrass at Spring Creek Prairie. It is an exclusively tallgrass prairie species, threatened by continued habitat loss. More on their habits and habitat is here: www.gpnc.org/regal.htm
I must have personally had over one hundred sightings during a four-hour period as I walked about during the 2010 Bioblitz at the prairie. At this stage, they flutter quickly and seemingly erratically around, along the tops of the grasses, occasionally diving back down into the grass where they pause before re-emerging to continue their flight. Capturing them in image during this stage (with my skill and equipment) is a matter of sheer luck! Here and below are a few of my luckiest.
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