This is a fine art giclée print using vibrant Epson UltraChrome inks which capture the image beautifully on 100% cotton rag paper. The heavy matte quality of this paper lends itself to the texture and brush strokes of my original paintings. SIZES AVAILABLE: 5.5” x 7” printed on 8.5” x 11” paper 8” x 10” printed on 8.5” x 11” paper 11” x 14” printed on 13” x 17” paper 16” x 20” printed on 17” x 22” paper All prints are signed and titled in pencil below the image. SHIPPING: Each print is carefully inserted in a clear cello sleeve and shipped in a rigid mailing envelope or a mailing tube, depending upon the print size. When purchases include multiple prints of varying sizes, smaller prints will be gently rolled alongside larger prints for shipping. Orders will ship within 5 business days unless advised otherwise. All orders, with the exception of orders to South Africa, will be shipped as a tracked packet with an estimated arrival of 5 – 13 business days.
Illustrator Pascal Campion captures the joy of simply being alive, whether we're with loved ones, pets, or taking a moment to ourselves.
Suzan Visser is an illustrator and a visual artist born in 1967 in Maarsbergen, NL. Whil...
Creative minds being creative together ✍🏻✍🏻 Collab with @spacedru1d! They did the lines for this and I did the colours. Here’s part 2
They are just...."Roommates" 🫴 #hideduo #hideduofanart #qsmpfanart
Original art work by Thomas Little for Little Ocean Blue Studio. Illustrated Print will be professionally reproduced and printed on high quality photo paper. Can be signed by artist upon request. (no extra cost) Print on demand - 5 to 7 business days shipping time.
We've put together some of the best, the cutest and the most downright adorable cute baby animals photos for you to swoon over. You're welcome!
Voyez son blog ICI Une merveille! On peut y voir les techniques pour en arriver à de telles illustrations.. Cette fois, j'ai...
no entenderían lo mucho que amo un buen desayuno me lo tomo muy en serio soy esa
A late morning lie in the summer after 7th year because they deserve some rest :)
Art4Petz is the place to find unique products and gifts for dog lovers. And you can learn all about Dogs on our cool Dog Blog.
Foxes are beautiful animals. I wanted to capture their cuteness in a cube form and make it available to you to enjoy and create. I've also extended the instructions to show you how to make a bigger version of the fox using chunky chenille yarn.
An art exhibition in Cremona, Italy used city billboards to display paintings by artist Nicoletta Ceccoli who specializes in disturbing MKULTRA-themed imagery, complete with clear allusions to child abuse. Here's a look at this horrific display of elite depravation.
Use this guide to make sure you see all the most beautiful places to visit in the Dolomites Italy! A one-week itinerary for Lake Como and Dolomites.
20 High Resolution Pics Of Cats So You Can Bask In Their Perfection - World's largest collection of cat memes and other animals
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Hoy queremos alegrarnos la mañana con estos animales hechos con frutas por virtuosos de la talla, un break divertido que seguro les encantará a los más pequeños de la casa. Y bueno si os atrevéis quizá vuestros niños comerán la fruta con más ganas que nunca!
everybody has seen vanessa stockard's black cat paintings im sure but im still so obsessed with how she paints the cat like literally JUST eyes
Get an intimate look at the making of the album.
Fascinating Paintings Of Artist Vanessa Stockard's Cat, Kevin - World's largest collection of cat memes and other animals
What you're seeing is not the work of some magic or Photoshop, these animals are actually perfectly round. There's nothing better than looking like a fluffy ball of cuteness and these animals are ready to show it off, cause, baby, they were born this way! While predators come in all shapes and sizes, these adorable round creatures surely would not hurt a fly. From purrfectly round cats, to fluffy hamsters that look like cotton balls, Bored Panda collected these fluffy creatures to brighten your day.
I get bored easily, so in my years as an elementary art teacher, I would continually try out new ideas with my students, and I liked to introduce the kids to different artists each year. When I repeated a project or idea, I tried to give it a new 'spin'. But there were certain projects I did every year without fail, and never tired of them (I suppose that's like a singer singing the same favorite song in concert after concert, year after year). They were the projects everyone expected to see, no matter what. But this year, I am retired, and this time of year, four particular annual projects are on my mind, and are not likely to be in my replacement's repertoire. Thumbprint Pussywillows! *Note: the pussywillow pic at the top of this post was found on facebook, and I apologize that I do not know the source. But it's so cute I wanted to share it with you! Before everything starts to blossom and bloom in the spring, there are the pussywillows! Year after year, in early March, I have slogged around in melting snow to find pussywillows and bring them to school for my kindergartners to see and touch. In years where I couldn't find them outside, I resorted to purchasing them in the floral department of my local supermarkets. I'd put some on each table, and we would examine how the black seed pods would open and let the little soft silvery pussywillows out. The kids would color a vase, and maybe a table, on colored construction paper, and draw the stems and seed pods. Then, with tempera paint (a mix of white with a dab of black and a hint of silver) they would use their little thumbs to stamp the soft fluffs. Spring Hats! You may call them Easter bonnets, but this little Jewish art teacher (me) simply called them spring hats, and my kindergartners made them every year before spring break. The materials were paper plates with a hole punched on each side and a ribbon or hunk of fat yarn strung through, colored paper tape, scissors, and moist sponges to activate the glue on the paper tape. The kids learned how to fold, cut, bend, twist, and curl the tape, and the hats became as crazy as they wanted. Here's a group of happy kindergartners! Teddy Bear Chairs! The 2nd graders in my school district take an annual springtime field trip to tour the Vermont Teddy Bear Factory, traveling by ferry across Lake Champlain to get there. Many of the students purchase a Build-a-Bear while at the factory, plus they all have some sort of stuffed animal friend at home. So each year, my 2nd grade students built teddy bear chairs, out of 4 toilet paper cores (the legs), 2 paper towel cores (the back supports), two 7" squares of cardboard from shipping cartons (the seat and the back), and Elmer's Glue-All. We painted them either with acrylic paints, or tempera covered with a tempera varnish or Mod Podge to seal the paint. I think my replacement has chosen to make bear beds instead, and I'm sure they will be adorable. But they won't be the chairs! Q-Tip Lilacs! I have some lilac trees in my backyard. Every year when they bloomed, I would cut big bunches of them and bring them to my art room, putting a vase full of fragrant flowers on every table. Ahhh!! Every year, one first grade teacher, upon smelling the flowers, would say this to her little ones: "Do your very best today! This is my favorite project! I will hang them all up for Author's Day!" Then the students would create a vase, a table, stems, and leaves, and finally paint the flowers using Q-Tips with with various tints of violet, lilac, blue, pink, and white. Over the years, the vase, table, stems and laves were done with various materials: crayon, oil pastel, collage, etc., but the flowers always were exuberantly painted with cotton swabs.
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Dietro lo speudonimo di Ariduka55, ma anche di Monokubo, si cela una misteriosa artista giapponese che crea affascinanti illustrazioni fantasy con animali
ART NOUVEAU Art Nouveau (French pronunciation: [aʁ nuvo], Anglicised to /ˈɑrt nuːˈvoʊ/) is an international philosophy[2] and style of art, architecture and applied art—especially the decorative ar…
The ultimate question.
Preview a digital exhibition of still life paintings and more, featuring new works from contemporary artist Stuart Dunkel.