View allAll Photos Tagged overbite
ꜰᴇᴀᴛᴜʀɪɴɢ ᴠɪɴᴄᴜᴇ, ᴍɪɴᴜɪᴛ, ᴍɪᴡᴀꜱ, ᴅᴇᴡʏᴘʟᴜꜱʜ & ᴘʀᴇᴛᴛʏ ʟɪᴀʀꜱ
Outfit - Vincue - Bellie Set @ Mainstore
Horns - Minuit - Laura Horns @ Mainstore
Hair - MIWAS - Hair #Rose @ Hentai Fair // ᴄʟᴏꜱᴇꜱ ꜱᴇᴘᴛ 17ᴛʜ
^added flyaway strands & highlights
Lip Piercings - dewyPLUSH - Snake Bites Piercing @ Mainstore
Slapper - Pretty Liars - Girl Face Slapper @ Mainstore
✦♡✦♡✦♡✦♡
ᴏᴛʜᴇʀꜱ:
ʟᴇʟᴜᴛᴋᴀ - ᴍɪʟᴀɴ
ᴇʙᴏᴅʏ - ʀᴇʙᴏʀɴ
ʜᴇᴀᴜx - ᴛᴀʏʟᴏʀ
ᴠᴇʟᴏᴜʀ - ɪᴘᴀɴᴇᴍᴀ ʙᴏᴅʏ ɪɴ ɪᴄʏ
ᴍᴀʀᴜ ᴋᴀᴅᴏ - ꜱᴋᴜʟʟ ʜᴇᴀᴅ ꜰᴏx
ᴄʀʏ ʙʙ - ᴘᴇᴛ ɴᴀᴍᴇꜱ
… of a kiss?
… of saying ‘I love you’?
… of eating chocolate?
Your choice. It’s the sort of image that leads to many stories.
Of course, with my inside knowledge of the situation, I just know they are about to say ‘How long do I have to keep doing this?’.
Sigh.
This is for the Macro Mondays theme today of Open. I was wracking my neuron for something different to do (always a problem with Macro Mondays, especially when the themes start repeating themselves). So this is it. The (only) idea that was forthcoming. I retire exhausted…
Thanks for looking. I hope you enjoy the image. Happy Macro Mondays :)
[Handheld in daylight at considerable risk.
Developed and processed in Affinity Photo on the iPaddle. All the usual basics along with reducing the Clarity (to flatter) and increasing the saturation and some delicate sharpening.
I did try a mono version. It was awful. Learning took place ;)]
The White-winged Crossbill and its cousin the Red Crossbill have the avian version of overbite. Better for extracting those yummy seeds from pine cones.
today was the first day in a couple of weeks I was able to take a walk out back. Between being busy with last minute things to do before the holiday, the nasty weather and then feeling a little under the weather myself, it felt GOOD to get out and get a little sunshine and fresh air!
It was nice to see this fellow still hanging around. This is the buck with the overbite.
Here's a Northwestern Crow (Corvus caurinus) who has a rather large overbite. Looks like it's had a mud bath too!
Something is weird with my lips on my recreated Catwa HDPro-to-Evo X head. I'll check my underbite/overbite faders.
On certain angles, even with my mouth completely closed, my teeth are visible.
A small flock of Red Crossbills feasted on pine cones along Mill Creek in the Hollowell Park section of Rocky Mountain National Park.
A dinosaur on display at the Royal Tyrell Museum
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.
© All rights reserved
Explore 23 Aug, 2013. Best position #18
© All Rights Reserved. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my prior permission.
Cassie never became a showgirl because of her overbite. She also has a weird kink in her tail (but we don't talk about that).
Nicknamed Grimace, s/he's not snarling at us, M Aichmerga just has an 'overbite' anomaly on the left side of his (her?) young bill.... Juvenile Hooded Merganser (Lophodytes cucullatus) of Small Belmont Pond, Kelowna, BC. Hard to tell if this is a female or a non-breeding male. Because of the orange on the lower mandible, I'm inclined to see a female, but there's much more black as one would expect from a non-breeding male....
We have decided since her confirmation is anything but true toy poodle...overbite, no tail, long body..we are going for an unconventional clip.....to accent her best feature~ her "so darn cuteness!"
EXPLORE! #182 on November 8, 2009
As I figured a workaround for my ailing computer (use gfxCardStatus to bypass a defective video card) I am loading some images from my Florida trip.
Note the little "tooth" on the beak- and the overbite- similar to falcons, but a songbird. Interestingly, DNA sequencing reveled that falcons were related to parrots, not t other raptors, so maybe if we live another million years or so the shrike tribe will be competing with falcons...
We were really blessed to have Reggie, a petite sheltie, as a member of our family for 14 years. He was a sweet boy and loved to cuddle. So when the theme "Something Soft & Cuddly" surfaced of course I knew "who" I was going to add to the collection of softies. Such a cool story of how he came to join our family. We were seeking a housebroken dog (so around a year old or so). Found a beautiful sheltie and made all of the arrangements to purchase him. Had named him, brought all of the supplies and then the day before we were to bring him home the person who was selling him decided to keep him instead. Of course we were all heartbroken and so disappointed. Then a week later, what was intended to happen did. We found Reggie, who was unwanted (and free) because he was no longer a puppy and had an overbite (so a no go for breeding, which we could care less about, we thought it was cute how his tongue stuck out between his teeth) and the runt of the litter. Needless to say it was love at first sight and a total "win" "win". A few more of him, Loving Lake Life: flic.kr/p/2jog6Ko, Barking at HIS Lake: flic.kr/p/2jodwzm and a Final Farewell to His Girl: flic.kr/p/2johiwU .
Project 48-52, week 14
1/200 sec, f10, iso64
Nikon Z7II, 50mm 1.8
flash camera left, reflector camera right.
GROUP: SMILE ON SATURDAY
THEME: ONE EYE
SUBJECT: A DOG NAMED BOOBIE
(a friend's dog. i've never seen a dog with overbite before@)
I was looking at photos I took and thought "Why am I not in this photo jumping?" So I went back down there and jumped. Sorry the microphone holder thingy is in the way :|
i look like a freak with that overbite (psst, im exaggerating)
This dog belongs to a gentleman I met by the Lake. They come for a walk but this dog is being carried most of the time. a very good and cute dog but I didn't know they can have an overbite! He told me it's as normal in dogs as in humans!
Have a nice day, everyone! I hope you're all doing well!
Thank you so much for stopping by and for the kind comments and favs. They are very much appreciated!
The eastern box turtle is one of six extant subspecies of the common box turtle. It has a high-domed, rounded, hard upper shell, called a carapace. The vivid, orange and yellow markings on its dark brown shell distinguish it from other box turtles, as do the four toes on its hind feet. Its distinct coloring camouflages it among the damp earth, fallen leaves and other debris found on the floor of moderately moist forests.
The underside of its shell, called its plastron, is dark brown and hinged. All box turtles have this bilobed plastron, which allows them to almost completely shut their shell. When threatened, the box turtle pulls its body into its shell and waits for the danger to pass. Its shell is also unique in that it can regenerate. In one reported case, the carapace of a badly burned box turtle completely regenerated.
Box turtles have a hooked upper jaw, and most have a significant overbite. Their feet are slightly webbed. There are many ways to tell a male and female box turtle apart. Males are generally larger and have shorter, thicker tails than females. Males also have short, thick, curved hind claws, while females' hind claws are long, straight and thin.
Eastern box turtles walk energetically with their heads upright and may travel about 50 meters (55 yards) in one day. A homing instinct, an innate ability to navigate to a "home base" despite being in an unfamiliar area, helps this turtle find its way back home.
Size
Byron Lotton, the chief engineer that developed the Glave, was furious when it was stolen. After the initial attempts at recovery failed, it became clear that a second DCS (Dominance Class Starfighter) would be needed. Much of the advanced tech used in the Glave was impossible to replicate for various reasons but Byron believed he could come up with something just as cutting edge.
The Reclamation was designed and developed in just over a year. It is piloted by none other than Byron Lotton himself. The Glave will be found...
Calyptorhynchus baudinii Eating fruit (nuts) on the Hakea undulata plant.
It is one of the two White-tailed black Cockatoos we have in our region. On of the main differences from the other White-tailed cockatoo is that this one has a long top beak and has an overbite!
"The IUCN red list notes the species as Zanda baudinii, recognising an elevation of the subgenus in its conservation assessment. The range of threats to the declining population, estimated to be between ten and fifteen thousand remaining individuals, is listed with the conservation status of endangered by extinction.[2]
The bird is part of an annual census, the Great Cocky count, that has been held every year since 2009 to track the population change of Baudin's and other black cockatoos.[10]"
Photo: Jean
Black-chinned Mountain-Tanager (Anisognathus notabilis) is an endemic of the west slope of the Andes of Colombia and Ecuador. The name Anisognathus notabilis derives from Latin, with the generic name a compound of anisos, "unequal", and gnathus, "lower jaw", in reference to the difference in upper and lower mandible length (the birds of this genus all have a distinctive overbite); the specific epithet notabilis means notable or remarkable (Jobling 2010).
Otherwise healthy looking animal with a big overbite but it was eating well. Nice to see it in the morning sunshine.
Been mostly offline all weekend, due to the storm and the power outage the storm caused...and possibly the Dept of Water and Power prioritizing higher income neighborhoods...not sure...but I'm suspicious...
ANYWAY, turned the ol' computer on for the first time since Friday night, went digging for a fun shot to come back with...first off, I have maybe ten photos from this shoot, and that kills me. Why didn't I shoot more? Why didn't I keep more?
But, but but but, I still have this one, and I'm staring at it, finally realize, 14 years later, that it's Kate's little overbite that I found so charming, it's a smile lacking in self-consciousness, couldn't get enough of it, that day.
Okay, wow, there's a bunch from this shoot I never posted...I was shooting so much back then, some shoots just got lost in the shuffle.
But I have re-discovered you, old old photo shoot! Nothing is lost! Nothing! Is! Lost!