View allAll Photos Tagged nuts
Pili Nuts. Product of Bicol.
Picture taken during my trip to Camarines Sur on May 27 to May 29, 2009.
© Quing S. Obillos 2009
I like this shot simply for the natural history behind it. The holes in this cactus and the nuts inside, are the work of the Acorn Woodpecker, an industrious creature that appears to spend more time storing nuts than it does eating them.
Fresh dates, dried apricots, dried cherries, and nuts at Applecrest Farm and Orchard. Chestnuts, too! My favorite go-to place for fresh ingredients for holiday baking.
All New Scavenger Hunt - Round 49
8. Shopping
48/365 Days in Colour
(not exactly golden yellow, more golden brown -which song I love btw- but I had no time to find something else)
natural candy in studio enviroment
1 SB 900 high on camera right, shooting into a white reflective umbrella
1 SB 900 linear left from the bowl, shooting into a white reflective umbrella
1 Snooted SB 900 acting as a "backlight" on bowl from picture left.
"Mixed Nuts" (played by the same two people who portray Half-Pint and Oscar) has tickled funny bones throughout the region with its special blend of hilarious hijinks, guaranteed to produce side-splitting laughter! Lori and Mike plan on having a picnic celebrating the summer reading program but take some time to get going as Lori has trouble setting the table, has to awaken a sleepy Mike, and Mike wants to sneak an early snack.
This program was funded in part or in whole with money from Minnesota's Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund.
Seen at the Forest How Guest House, Eskdale, Cumbria. This squirrel is the smaller of the two males which I saw on my visit. He had an injured toe, which was quite swollen compared with the previous day.
Newly born nuts. Opening wide on trees, falling hard on ground, as hard as their fragile existence could be. Animals, dogs (yeah, nuts-eating-dogs), whatever. Brain factory, 2 by set.
Disarm (Banjo) 2013
Pedro Reyes
In the Lisson Gallery
Disarm at Lisson Gallery is a solo exhibition by Mexican artist Pedro Reyes, comprising mixed-media works and a live musical performance relating to the artist's ambitious international project in which illegal firearms were used to fabricate musical instruments.
Pedro Reyes’ work is a socio-political critique on contemporary society and our responsibility towards it. His projects are catalysts for communal and psychological transformation, triggering group interaction and creativity.
The exhibition at Lisson Gallery includes musical instruments created from firearms, including revolvers, shot-guns and machine-guns, which were crushed by tanks and steamrollers to render them useless. These were offered to the artist by the Mexican government following their confiscation and subsequent public destruction in the city of Ciudad, Juarez.
[Lisson Gallery website]