Hereford, England (by Ben Abel)
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More cow art from earlier this year, this painting is of a Hereford cow. I remember seeing a lot of Herefords when I lived in NZ so painting them has a nostalgic vibe for me.
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Twilight Sparkle is in the Chained Library.
In Hereford Cathedral, in England.
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Half Listening
Commission for @mooality!! This was sooo so fun and I love how this turned out!
ID under cut.
[ID: A digital illustration of one anthropomorphic rabbit and an anthropomorphic cow with two heads. They are both seated at a table so that we only see them from the waist up. One head of the cow is listening to the rabbit talk with interest, while the other is looking away with disinterest. On the table in front of them are two plates and a couple napkins. One plate has a half eaten cookie and there is a partial croissant on a napkin. The rabbit is holding a sweet, over the top drink with sprinkles, whipped cream, and caramel drizzle. The cow is holding a simple drink with ice cubes and two straws, one for each head. The rabbit is gray with orange stripes and hair, and is wearing a yellow shirt. The cow is cream and brown spotted with one head having brown hair and the other having blue hair. The blue haired head has piercings, while the other head has a flower behind their ear.]
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Sitting on Sir Edward Elgar's Head
Hereford ~ August 2023
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Today's Schleich is:
13765 Hereford Calf
[2014 - 2016]
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Man i love having interests
I be having so much fun
LOOK AT MY GUITAR
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study from @bovineblogger 's post
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Hereford bull sketch | Limited edition fine art print from an original drawing.
My sketches start life as hand-drawn graphite images made on cartridge paper. I often work on these with charcoal, oil pastel or Caran d'Ache to create the look I'm after. The artwork is then scanned and finessed digitally ready for fine art printing. This process often referred to as Giclée printing uses the highest standard of printing methods to give gallery quality results that maintain all the details of the original sketch.
The graphite pencils I use are Faber-Castel, the oil pastels are Sennelier and the china-graph is Caran d’Ache. The inks are pigment based archive quality (100years+). The heavyweight specialist papers I use are of the best professional quality having a wonderful surface designed specifically for fine art drawings and illustrations.
Very limited editions with only ten per size printed.
All artwork is signed and includes a certificate of authenticity.
The A5 are 5.8" x 8.25" (14.8cm x 21cm)
The A4 are 8.25" x 11.7" (21cm x 29.8cm)
The A3 are 11.7" x 16.5" (29.8 cm x 42cm)
The A2 are 16.5" x 23.4" (42 cm x 59.4cm)
Originals are A3 11.7" x 16.5" (29.8 cm x 42cm)
Frames not included in price.
Free shipping on artwork to all destinations.
https://www.seanbriggs.co.uk/product/hereford-bull/?feed_id=3456&_unique_id=66138fa9abfd7
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‘Cathedral and the river’
Hereford 2014
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Mitta Valley, Victoria
photo sourced via Herefords Australia
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Photo taken by Richard Jenkins in Herefordshire, early 20th century.
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https://villavalkea.fi/navetta-valkea/
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On this day:
EXPLOSION EARTHQUAKES
On December 17, 1896, a "strange meteoric light" traveled across the night sky over Worcester and Hereford, England. It was bright enough to have "picked up a pin" from the ground. A nearby town witnessed a "great blaze" in the sky. Sky explosions and earthquakes accompanied the phenomenon, occurring repeatedly throughout the night and into the next morning. Similar disturbances had taken place in that locale in 1863, 1868, and 1893. In 1893 the brilliant illumination had lasted thirty seconds and was followed by quakes in Llanthomas and Clifford; the performance was then repeated half an hour later and twenty miles away at Hereford. In 1894, in Liverpool, the sky took on a "red appearance," and then an earthquake hit, followed by a rain "black as ink." The rain turned to black snow and black hail, falling for nearly an hour. Five hours later, it fell at Worcester.
The earliest earthquakes and aerial phenomena in Worester and Hereford were recorded in October 1661. Two church wardens published the account in a broadside named A True and Perfect Relation of the Terrible Earthquake. They said that "monstrous flaming things" appeared in the sky, and the town clerk's wife, Margaret Petmore, went into labor and gave birth to three male offspring, all of whom had teeth and spoke at birth.
Text from: Almanac of the Infamous, the Incredible, and the Ignored by Juanita Rose Violins, published by Weiser Books, 2009
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Today's Schleich is:
13867 Hereford Cow
[2018 - ]
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