View allAll Photos Tagged forestnymph
Dress & Flowers - The Laughing Academy - Elusyve Charm Dress
Antlers - Illusions - Herne Horns
Ears - Illusions - Fairy ears
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This was done by the divine Lola... www.flickr.com/photos/lolathecarchick/10604677/
I love the way she tweaked the colors, and made my hair look like a living part of the surrounding plants.
Also, it was sweet of her to do this, anyway.
Statue taken in Hardwick Park, Sedgefield, England and converted to black and white.
Comments welcome?
I wanted to incorporate as much of the surroundings into this photo as possible. My forest Nymph.
Model: Jenny G
MUA/Styling: Jenny G & CaitlinMaryanne (me)
Photography/Edit: CaitlinMaryanne
Copyright CaitlinMaryanne. This photo can not be used without my permission.
We met a mother and son on the Sand Point trail as we were heading back towards Lake Ozette. She was very excited to have seen this flower and browsed through our botanical guide to see if she could find it, which she couldn't.
She said she hadn't seen if for several years and that she thought it was called Forest Nymph. Once back home, I googled it, but mostly found some less than wholesome web sites , dealing with a totally different kind of nymph.
Does anyone recognize this flower? The flower itself is about the size of a nickel, and stood no more than 1.5 - 2" off the ground.
EDIT: So it turns out the real name is Moneses Uniflora, and it appears to be widely spread in the northern hemisphere, according to this wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moneses_uniflora
We met a mother and son on the Sand Point trail as we were heading back towards Lake Ozette. She was very excited to have seen this flower and browsed through our botanical guide to see if she could find it, which she couldn't.
She said she hadn't seen if for several years and that she thought it was called Forest Nymph. Once back home, I googled it, but mostly found some less than wholesome web sites , dealing with a totally different kind of nymph.
Does anyone recognize this flower? The flower itself is about the size of a nickel, and stood no more than 1.5 - 2" off the ground.
EDIT: So it turns out the real name is Moneses Uniflora, and it appears to be widely spread in the northern hemisphere, according to this wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moneses_uniflora
We met a mother and son on the Sand Point trail as we were heading back towards Lake Ozette. She was very excited to have seen this flower and browsed through our botanical guide to see if she could find it, which she couldn't.
She said she hadn't seen if for several years and that she thought it was called Forest Nymph. Once back home, I googled it, but mostly found some less than wholesome web sites , dealing with a totally different kind of nymph.
Does anyone recognize this flower? The flower itself is about the size of a nickel, and stood no more than 1.5 - 2" off the ground.
EDIT: So it turns out the real name is Moneses Uniflora, and it appears to be widely spread in the northern hemisphere, according to this wikipedia article: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moneses_uniflora