View allAll Photos Tagged scroll

The Majestic, City Square, Leeds

My newest favorite design coming with the loft collection, it's called "vintage passion" Isn't it the prettiest?!?!

Florence City Cemetery

 

Taken for the Jules' Photo Challenge Group:

We are going to have a scavenger hunt, but not just any scavenger hunt...this one will take place in a cemetery/graveyard!

 

Here are the rules for this month:

 

All photos must be taken on the same day (Between Oct 01- Oct 28) in a single cemetery of your choosing.

No recycled photos allowed.

Some subjects require more than one shot, you may collage them or post individually, whichever you prefer.

If you find all of the objects on the list, you will have 31 photos.

 

(1 tombstone that is meant to look like something else)

Nene Park - 'Clematis vitalba' in Bluebell Wood... (Old Man's beard, Traveller's joy)

The Israel Museum in Jerusalem houses the Dead Sea Scrolls. They were discovered between 1947 and 1979 in 11 caves near the Dead Sea. The scrolls are of great historical significance, because it is the only surviving copy of Biblical documents made before 100 AD. More info or View LARGE

Reva Reservoir, Bingley, UK

 

SPNC - Year 4 - Instruction #17

 

"Let's dive in sin. Go out and stage a "street" photo but it must not look staged"

 

Haris P.

My Scroll Right page is from Johanna's Christmas, A Festive Coloring Book by Johanna Basford, colored with Prismacolor Premier Soft Core Colored Pencils, Tombow Dual Brush Pens, Uni Posca pens and blended with light colored pencils.

The Dead Sea scrolls consist of roughly 900 documents, including texts from the Hebrew Bible, discovered between 1956 and 1979 in eleven caves in and around the Wadi Qumran. The texts are of great religious and historical significance, as they include practically the only known surviving copies of Biblical documents made before 100 AD.

 

This is a photo of the only Copper Scroll en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_Scroll

 

This reminds me of accelerator bubble chamber pictures

Puppies don't always do what you want, even in Tamriel.

 

The New Life Festival is celebrated across Tamriel to mark the death of the old year and the birth of the new year. It was once a celebration of Magnus, the Sun God, but became a celebration of New Life, heralded by the sun.

... with hyper-fast scrolling (free-spinning) and tilt scroll control

A November walk through the grounds of St Mark's Anglican Church in Niagara-On-The-Lake, Ontario.

 

If you like my work click the "Follow" button on Flickr.

 

Other places to see my work rumimume.blogspot.ca/, Google+ google+, twitter

The Flickr Lounge-Anything Wooden

 

This is the Scroll on the top of Stu's 115 year old bass.

Scroll with film and mixed media

Or, more correctly, Skyrim figure ideas. I'll replay Morrowind and Oblivion this week, and then have a go at some characters from them.

 

Standing in front is an idea for a regular citizen. Yeah, you've seen him before. I figured that I may as well throw him in there, since he was supposed to be a Skyrim character in the first place.

 

Left to right, we have an idea for a Stormcloak soldier. I don't have that helmet in an appropriate color, but I will obviously change it when I do get one. The good thing about this combination, is that it doesn't matter whether you prefer yellow or flesh figures, as you can modify it simply enough for either.

 

Next is a cheap idea for fur armor. Part of the design process I suppose. The same can be said for my Greybeard figure. It was just a thought I had.

 

Next, we have a Necromancer. I think that torso suits them well, as in game, they have a glowing green logo on their robes, although it is in the shape of a skull.

 

Finally, we have a skeleton. I took a look at some reference pictures, and decided that that combination of skeleton parts is the best purist combination. It works perfectly for a Cyrodiil skeleton, but the Skyrim ones have glowing blue eyes. Close enough, I suppose.

TP52 - Week 47 - Ornamental

Cathedrale Notre-Dame d'Amiens

Center scroll detail on our 1953 wrought iron porch railings after a much needed paint job.

 

Rustoleum Regal Red

 

A kakemono (掛物, "hanging thing"), more commonly referred to as a kakejiku (掛軸, "hung scroll"), is a Japanese hanging scroll used to display and exhibit paintings and calligraphy inscriptions and designs mounted usually with silk fabric edges on a flexible backing, so that it can be rolled for storage.

Photo taken in Buke-Yashiki (Samurai's House) Japan.

Palace of Versailles, Paris, France

Scrolls on an otherwise plain gate, on Grote Street, Adelaide.

 

Taken with iPhone 3GS.

My teeth fell out!! Explored 311! We appreciate the sincere compliments!! Lance and Karen

through the eyes of the Scrolls 3

NTNU Symphony Orchestra

National Concert Hall, Liberty Square

Taipei

Taiwan

台灣 台北 自由廣場 國家音樂廳

國立臺灣師範大學

2007.05.15

© Alton Thompson 唐博敦

 

Scroll ornamentation on a double bass.

 

Alton's Images

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