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#Bamboo
000100010001000 · 12 hours
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嵐山: Bamboo forest covered in snow (2017)
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uroko · 6 months
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 嵐山 // Bamboo forest covered in snow
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Bamboo dragon
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#76 - 竹子 (zhúzi / bamboo) - They camouflage nicely into a bamboo forest 🎋🌿🌱
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zegalba · 8 months
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Gucci by Tom Ford autumn/winter 1999 crushed velvet bamboo handle mini bag
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~ Greens ~
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itscolossal · 1 month
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Immersive Bamboo Installations by Asim Waqif Whirl and Heave in Monumental Motion
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ilikeit-art · 8 months
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entomologize · 1 year
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Life-sized bamboo insects by Noriyuki Saitoh
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lamaery · 7 months
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3 Bamboo
Yay, secret project mashup. Painter decorating a new tea cup for Tress. :)
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aworldofpattern · 1 year
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Fan Bingbing at the Cannes Film Festival 2023, wearing custom Christopher Bu.
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tanuki-kimono · 14 days
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Fantastic unsual pattern for this summer kimono, depicting naturalistic birds (the goose!) over bamboo stalk ground.
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vibinwiththefrogs · 30 days
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Cane/Bamboo Adventures Part 1/?
So we just moved into a new house and there's this huge thing in the very back of the yard along a creek that I thought was bamboo, then I thought it was cane, and then after checking as many cane ID posts and videos I could find, I'm still completely unsure. My friend who's a wildlife student says it doesn't look like bamboo to her, but we both agree it doesn't look like the cane we've seen around South Georgia. She said it must be Arundinaria gigantea because no other cane gets this large, but all the cane we've seen identified as A. gigantea doesn't look like this. Here's my notes and some pics.
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First, the leaves are much smaller than cane I've seen around here. Even very small, young cane around here has leaves about the length of my forearm.
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Second, a couple things online I found distinguishing bamboo from cane say that new bamboo branches grow outward, while cane grows more upward. However there seems to be both upward and outward shoots on this bunch (examples of both pictured above). Also worth noting, the picture above on the left is the biggest diameter branch I found. I have relatively small hands for context (I wear small-medium sized gloves).
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Then here's just some more pictures. I crawled down into a creek for the root picture (left)(a steep 7 foot drop haha). The middle picture is the youngest bunch I found, again it doesn't resemble cane I've seen around here. The picture on the right is a further away picture after I cleared some dead branches.
Also worth noting, this is tucked behind a house, between a fence, a creek, and like 3 trees. So it doesn't have a ton of space to grow, and I'm guessing that's why it's so dense.
If anyone happens to know anything about this please let me know! A week or so ago I emailed a guy from NC State and uploaded it on inaturalist, but I haven't received any replies or ID 😭
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zegalba · 2 months
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Issey Miyake spring/summer 2006
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itscolossal · 5 months
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At a New Restaurant in South Vietnam, Dine Under a Dramatic Thatched Bamboo Canopy
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ilovenycee · 2 months
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livesunique · 3 months
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A French 'Japonisme' Gilt & Patinated Bronze & Chinese Cloisonné Enamel Table By Ferdinand Barbedienne,
The Design attributed to Edouard Lievre, Paris, Circa 1870, the Cloisonné Qing Dynasty, 19th Century,
The rectangular top with turquoise ground elaborately decorated with colorful flora, fauna, feathers and foliate scrolls, set in cloud-form pierced gallery, raised on cluster-column bamboo-style stem adorned with dragons, with further bamboo-style supports and similar base with outscrolled feet, signed F. Barbedienne to base.
35 in. (89 cm.) high, 34 in. (87 cm.), 22 in. (56 cm.) deep.
Courtesy: Christie's
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