View allAll Photos Tagged scribble
Mural by Jason Thielke aka @jason_thielke located at 1075 Park Avenue in the 5 Points area of Denver, Colorado.
Photo by James aka @urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.
Edit by Teee
Compact ball of paper threaded together with loosely weaved wire around the ball to have a scribbled effect.
October 2017.
...at dusk near Gambells Rest, Bundanoon.
Chamonix 045F1, Apo-Sironar-S 150mm at f16 for 2 seconds, Shanghai 100, Xtol(1:2)+Adonal(1:200)
... got eaten alive by mosquitoes, but didn't want to miss the first sunset for 2013 ...
© All rights reserved. 2013.
website: www.dragonpapillon.com
I have no idea how these scribbles on a stone found on Sutton Beach, Redcliffe, Queensland, are created.
I dont have to sell my soul
Hes already in me
Stone Roses (opens youtube)
Brush by quells
Model core-labs
Background night-fate
All Deviant Artists
Eucalyptus haemastoma (scribbly gum) is an Australian eucalypt that is named after the 'scribbles' on its bark. These zigzag tracks are tunnels made by the larvae of the scribbly gum moth (Ogmograptis scribula)
I made this card for Lisa Spangler's Scribble This challenge on white balance levels. I took this picture outside, but you can see the other differences here on my blog
I forgot to add that this card was inspired by Donna's card here: www.flickr.com/photos/3umbrellas/3510707261/
Backyard Canada Day fireworks could be heard and seen from all areas of the neighbourhood. Such a joy to photograph!
The Caves of Chicago are full of graffiti, signatures, and paintings. I am guessing this area was, like, the free time corner to do what you want.
expressing my self with scribbling LOL
Ya know I never scribbled on my moms walls- what kinda artist am I?
The ‘scribbles’ on scribbly gums are an icon of the Australian bush, but until recently very little was known about the cause of these distinctive scribbles. The scribbly gum moth larvae bore a meandering tunnel through the eucalypt tree’s bark at the level of the future cork cambium, first in long irregular loops and later in a more regular zigzag which is doubled up after a narrow turning loop.
When the cork cambium starts to produce cork to shed the outer bark it produces scar tissue in response to the feeding of the caterpillar, filling the doubled up part of the larval tunnel with highly nutritious, thin-walled cells. These replacement cells are ideal food for the caterpillar which moults into its final life stage with legs, turns around and eats its way back along the way it has come. It now grows rapidly to maturity and leaves the tree to spin a cocoon at its base, where it pupates.
Not long after the caterpillar leaves the tree, the bark cracks off and exposes the iconic scribbles beneath. (Source csiropedia.csiro.au/scribbly-gum-moths/)