Cranes Gallery
maximilian veers
kyouji takahara
ghost sarah
breezewong
dino valenti
virtual-artifacts:Cranes, one of a pair 1775-1790 Itō Jakuchū ,(Japanese, 1716-1800) Edo periodInk o
More Sandhill Cranes! This one is a 6 second exposure so you can see some “ghost birds”
One of my favourites from my long exposure bird photography collection. These are Sandhill Cranes ph
Sandhill Cranes at Whitewater Draw, Arizona. I used a fairly slow shutter speed (for wildlife) of 1/
Contemporary furisode nick-named “Dance of Cranes ‘Takarazukushi’ (treasures)
arsvitaest:Incense container (kōgō) in the shape of a clamshell, with cranes and tortoise motifs, Ja
nobrashfestivity:Katushika Hokusai, Cranes, from Quick lessons in Simplified Drawingmore
raunchysub: Look how the fag cranes its neck in order to accept its Alpha’s spit: Good faggot.www.ra
arsvitaest:Detail of kimono with flying cranes, Japan, ca. 1910-30Rijksmuseum
popularcultures:SOLANGE − CRANES IN THE SKYdirected by Solange Knowles & Alan Ferguson
kelogsloops:The Weaverprints | tutorials
whatthefauna:South African blue cranes engage in an elaborate courtship behavior that includes wing
Tate Modern Museum, Thames, London,, Grey Day, Summer 2010.A corner of the rebuilt Globe Theatre is
journalofanobody:Hui Tsung (Huizong), 1082-1135, Auspicious Cranes (detail)
tiredtangerine: The Cranes are Flying (1957)
The Cranes Flew ByRobert Duncan
Went out birding with my ornithology class today! We spotted probably 40 Sandhill Cranes in a corn f
thekimonogallery:A silk kurotomesodefeaturing yuzen-dyed cranes and bamboo by a deep blue river. La
A shrine was decorated with bushels of paper cranes. Each bushel should hold exactly a thousand bird
funnywildlife: Crowned Cranes by Wild Dogger on Flickr. flying in the Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania
If you ask very nicely, Monsieur Icarewill fold you some truly fantastic little treasures.(source)
nebulously-burnished: The Cranes are Flying, 1957
tiredtangerine:Tatiana Samoilova in The Cranes are Flying (1957)
Maebyeong Goryeo dynasty (918–1392), late 13th–early 14th century Korea. Stoneware with inlaid decor
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