View allAll Photos Tagged seashell
Sunny daylight, mid to late afternoon.
Macro shot of seashell with strong side lighting to bring out the texture.
This image could be used as a background image for a skin lotion ad or perhaps as a texture for some sort of science or oceanic promotion.
A macro of the seashells that were littered on a tucked away beach we found near Cowaramup, Western Australia.
This is an original painting I completed in gouache. It measures 2.5 x 3.5 inches...It's part of my Simplified series...(This is as simplified as I can get-- I'm a detail freak :D
Gazing at this Staten Island beach makes me feel calm. But, trying to quickly say this children's tongue twister does not:) "She sells seashells by the seashore. The shells she sells, are surely seashells. So if she sells shells. On the seashore, I'm sure she sells."
made for the "tag a month swap" being hosted by The Altered Paper.
enroute to swap partner in Australia.
This is from last spring, my family was staying on Virginia beach while we attended my cousin's graduation from medical school.
WA’s Seashells Hospitality Group recently celebrated the 20 year anniversary of its front office receptionist Sue Morris, who has worked in the company’s Scarborough property since it began operating more than two decades ago now.
She’s pictured aboveright on a sparkling Scarborough day with the property’s gm Christie Vanderbroek.
For more details on this story please go to 205.186.128.224/2010/01/29/sue-sells-seashells/
Seashell hotels is the best five star hotels in portblair can make you to dive deeply nothing but scuba diving , you can see the world around you by elephant riding, go for ferry round and roam portbalir, checkout the neil village by hiring the vehicle, snorkeling with the family at havelock island. Call on us at: 9933239625, visit us at: seashellhotels.net/
I've lived in the Daytona area since I was 10, and one thing we don't usually see here are really big, or really great looking seashells. Mostly, when you walk along our pristine, white, powdery shoreline, you find clam shells, and periwinkles, but rarely anything like a conch, or the smaller shells that have that shape. It was an unusual sight to see all of these pretty shells strewn about the piling.
My brother has been finding sand dollars lately, which we've never seen here..EVER! Once in a blue moon I've found this type, but never sand dollars. Makes me wonder what's up with the tides and why these shells which are normally found further south are washing up here. This bunch, I thought, looked almost as if they'd been placed there by someone. Very curious.......