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Home Furnishing Marine Sea Decor 18-20cm Giant Clam Tridacna Big Conch Natural Craft Ornaments Shell Wedding/Festival Decoration Product details Material: Organic Material Type: Conch Each shell 15-18cm Total 1 pcs USES: Conch, baker can be used to decorate household style, not the ocean style, in modern times, the English countryside, the Mediterranean, Korean rural styles such as often as you can see them, they can be arbitrary collocation in any scenario and style. Can post them on the wall to make special background wall, friends after watching the show originality will praise you. They can also be put by TV ark, floating window, bath crock edge, and so on. Remember also like in the home to the beach. Also can put them in the fish tank, with fine sand, seaweed, rockery, give the fish made a amusement park, to give the fish a warm home!!
Fashion designer Iris van Herpen is widely recognized as one of fashion’s most talented and forward-thinking creators who continuously pushes the boundaries of fashion design.
Seaweed and barnacles on a rock at Salisbury Beach. Salisbury, MA
Photographs from an extraordinary new book highlighting the remarkable diversity of plankton
One thing I miss living on a stretch of chalk coastline is a good old boulder. The best we manage in Broadstairs is a knobbly, football-sized flint. Today I am in St. Agnes, Cornwall, where giganti…
There's something about coming home after a long day and creating a dish that feels like a warm embrace. That's where this recipe for Golden Seared Cod with Herb Butter Sauce comes into play. It's a dish born from the desire for comfort, simplicity, and pure flavor. Cod, with its mild and flaky texture, transforms into a decadent meal when it’s perfectly seared and draped in a lush herb butter sauce that, despite its fancy feel, is incredibly easy to whip up. It's the perfect recipe to impress guests or just elevate your weeknight meal, making any dinner feel a
The coastal gardens of Mothecombe House in Devon have been tended and adapted by the same family since the nineteenth century, resulting in their current incarnation as a sanctuary for bees, butterflies and other insects