The Photo Art Gallery Blog | February 2012

The photos that made the world believe in fairies

In 1917 after falling into a stream at the bottom of the garden Frances Griffiths told her mother that it was because she was playing with the fairies, in order to prove her story she and her cousin Elsie Wright, two young girls from Cottingley, England produced perhaps the world’s most famous fairy pictures. Images that would set the world on a theosophical debate that would last decades.


The first two of the five images in which the fairies appear was taken on Elsies fathers Midg Quarter plate camera, which he pre-set  to 1/50s at f/11 for her. When her father developed the images he declared them as a prank and banned the girls from using the camera again.

It wasn't until 3 years later when the images had been making the rounds in local circles that they came to the attention of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who as a keen believer in the supernatural, decided to write an article on the existence of fairies in 1920 for The Strand magazine and used the girls images as the basis of his argument. The issue sold out almost immediately and split public opinion between the sceptics and believers.


It was around this time that the girls were asked to take more images, this time with Butchers Cameo Quarter plate cameras that had been given to them sealed to prevent tampering with the negatives. They created three more images with these cameras, which along with the original two plates were sent for testing by expert Harold Snelling and the labs at Kodak - both could find no fault with the plates concluding that the negatives were entirely genuine, unfaked photographs... [with] no trace whatsoever of studio work involving card or paper models". However, neither would go as far as saying that the images were genuine and therefore proof of fairies. Since as one expert added that he thought the photographs might have been made by using the glen features and the girl as a background; then enlarging prints from these and painting in the figures; then taking half-plate and finally quarter-plate snaps, suitably lighted. However, all this, he agreed, would be clever work and take time.



Over the years public interest faded, both girls moved on with their lives trying to leave behind the story. However, the two women were hounded by the press throughout their lives, but they remained quiet about the details, until eventually Elsie began to relent suggesting that the images were manifestations of her imagination. Finally in 1983 Elsie confessed that they had in fact created the fairies themselves by sketching the images from a Princess Mary's Gift Book and sticking them into the ground with hatpins.

Frances however maintained til her death that the last image named 'Fairy sunbath' was genuine.

Even today these photographs continue to mystify and fascinate the world, with movies, documentaries and books being made about the story. Most recently Frances memories have been published by her daughter Christine written from her own perspective.


The official website for the Cottingley Fairies and where you can find Frances memories can be found at http://www.cottingleyreflections.com/

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/29/2012 at 9:00 PM
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Check out our Photographer of the Week: tamlocke

The Photo Art Gallery Photographer of the Week is the wonderful tamlocke...............

"Just a Mum with a camera trying to catch the fleeting moments of the world as it whizzes by... I hope to make something from all this one day... but then... doesn't everyone!"    

Check out their gallery www.photoartgallery.com/artist/tamlocke

Here are a couple of gems to whet your appetite.................

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted on: 2/29/2012 at 8:16 PM
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Nokia's 41MP Camera phone

With a 41MP sensor and Carl Zeiss optics we can almost hear the compact markets coffin being nailed as Nokia steps up the camera phone game once again.


No word on the release date, or the price, but to whet your appetite here is the full list of specs:

  •         41 megapixel camera sensor with Nokia Pureview Pro imaging technology and Carl Zeiss optics
  •         Fullscreen 16:9 viewfinder with easy on-screen touch controls
  •         Xenon flash with operating range up to 3.5 m depending on conditions. Automatic fill-flash
  •         LED for video recording
  •         Focal length: 8.02 mm (35 mm equivalent focal length -26 mm, 16:9 / 28 mm, 4:3)
  •         Auto focus and touch to focus
  •         Focus modes: Hyperfocal, Macro, Infinity and Auto

  •         Focus range: 15 cm ~ infinity
  •         Macro focus 15-50 cm
  •         F number/aperture: F2.4
  •         Supported aspect ratios and resolutions True 16:9 (2 MP, 5 MP [Default], 8 MP, 41 MP) 4:3 (3 MP, 5 MP, 8 MP, 41 MP)
  •         Three shooting modes: Auto, Scenes, Creative
  •         Face detection software
  •         Launch camera from lock with full press of capture key
  •         Still images file format: JPEG/EXIF
  •         Automatic location tagging (Geotagging) of images and videos
  •         Automatic time and location marking for images and video in gallery
  •         One touch access from camera to captured images
  •         Images automatically taken in the correct orientation
  •         Pinch zoom in Photos image viewer and double tapping
  •         Integrated photo editor
  •         16 GB internal user memory
  •         Support for up to 48 GB with an external microSD memory card
  •         High-Speed microUSB to PC connectivity

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/28/2012 at 10:13 PM
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Sherman at the Museum of Modern Art

Infamous photographer Cindy Sherman has spent four decades shooting her unique and often controversial body of work based around self portraiture, impersonations and archetypes.



The definitive retrospective of Sherman's Work brings together 170 photographs from the 70's to the present. The images show her recreating the roles of ornate historical portraits, society portraits and sterotypical female roles.



The exhibition will run in New York's Museum of Modern Art until June 11.

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/28/2012 at 12:44 AM
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Check out our Photographer of the Week: ToxicRoach

The Photo Art Gallery Photographer of the Week is the wonderful ToxicRoach...............

Newbie ToxicRoach's gallery stood out to our curators fairly quickly because of it's unique and confident style. His black and white Americana shots have a very post apocalyptic feel to them.

Check out their gallery www.photoartgallery.com/artist/ToxicRoach

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/22/2012 at 11:13 PM
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The Queens Photographer : Cecil Beaton

Cecil Beaton spent nearly 30 years shooting for Vogue magazine before he found himself as the offical photographer for the British Royal family. Now an amazing collection of his work is coming to the Art Gallery of Ballarat for a one off exhibition.


The exhibition covers Beatons entire career, featuring previously unseen portraits of Queen Elizabeth. As well as a collection of his celebrity portraits including; Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn and Picasso.

"Beaton was one of the greatest British photographers of the 20th century." says the Victoria and Albert Museum curator that has complied the exhibiton for Ballarat.


Queen Elizabeth II by Cecil Beaton: A Diamond Jubilee Celebration is on display at the Art Gallery of Ballarat from 25 February - 15 April 2012.

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/21/2012 at 11:31 PM
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Night Photography by Brent Pearson

A big thank you to our guest blogger this week Brent Pearson for sharing his knowledge with us

- for more information check him out at brentpearsonphotography.com

Night Photography by Brent Pearson

While I come from a landscape and seascape background, I became intrigued with the unusual images that long exposure photography can produce and the ability to abstract detail in a scene, whether it is turning water into a an abstract mist, or turning clouds into movement.  This fascination with low-light photography eventually took me squarely into the realm of night photography.   Night photography is an extremely rewarding form of photography in that it can produce truly unique-looking images with a real "wow factor".
However many photographers are put off from venturing into the realm of night photography because of the various challenges that it brings including:


•    You can see through the viewfinder to compose
•    Your cameras autofocus systems don't work well in the dark
•    Your cameras light meter won't work
•    Your images can appear noisy if you are not careful


However if you know some basic techniques for night photography then all of these challenges can be easily overcome.  This article will give you some basic pointers to get you started in the world of nocturnal photography.


Equipment

The good news is that you don't need a lot of expensive equipment to do night photography.  Here's what you need.

•    Your camera needs to have a bulb setting (which allows you to lock the shutter open) and manual control over your lens's aperture.
•    You need a reasonably sturdy tripod
•    You need a cable release that allows you to lock the shutter open
•    A bright torch to help you compose and focus.

Step 1: Compose and focus

Find a good composition and set up your camera securely on the tripod.  To help you see, you want to use a bright torch that is illuminating your subject.  ideally get an assistant to help you out with the torch, otherwise I grip the torch between my knees (which frees up my hands to work the camera controls).
Zoom in all the way on the point of focus and either manually focus or use your autofocus.   Once your lens is focused, you will need to put your lens into "manual mode" so that it does not try to autofocus again.

Step 2: Estimating exposure
In my eBook I explain a more accurate way of calculating exposure, but for this quick guide let me just give you a simple exposure table to get you started.  Make sure that you set your camera's ISO to 200.  To estimate exposure, you start off by looking down the column to the moon setting that matches your current conditions.  So if you were shooting under a half moon,  then you would go down to the third row.   Then you can read across that row to explore different exposure settings.

 


So you could expose your image for 2min @ f4  or equally 4min @ f5.6 or 8min @ f8.

I would recommend you use the widest aperture you have for your initial test shot to ensure that your exposure is correct.

When evaluating your exposure, I strongly recommend you use your camera's histogram rather than just viewing the image on the LCD.  At night the LCD looks bright, and it is easy to think an image is correctly exposed only to find when you get back to your computer that it is 2 stops under exposed.  If you need more information on reading histograms, check out this article.

I would recommend you do your first night photography experiments under a full moon, as this will require the shortest exposures and allow you to correct any mistakes relatively quickly.

Getting the exposure right in camera is critical.  If you find that you need to boost your exposure later on the computer, you will probably find that you magnify a lot of noise that is produced in your images.   Long exposure photography does introduce more noise to your images, but providing your exposure is correct, this noise is manageable.   Any amplification of your exposure or signal during post production will amplify the noise to the point where it becomes a major problems.

Once you start becoming comfortable with the world of night photography, then you are ready to start experimenting with light painting.  I'll write a separate article on light painting in a future post.  If you are hungry to learn more about the world of night photography and light painting, then check out my web site for lots of tips and tutorials as well as my eBook on Night Photography and Light Painting.

Enjoy the night

Brent Pearson 

 

For more of our great tutorial content check out the Tutorials Page.

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/21/2012 at 12:17 AM
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Olympus Chairman arrested

In the on going saga that has been the Olympus accounting cover up the former chairman and two other lead executives have been arrested as part of the on going investigation.


The admission that the company had doctored the accounts to cover up their $1.7bn losses came to light after they fired their President Michael Woodford for raising concerns about the suspicious aquisitions.

As Kenneth Cukier of The Economist said "It is game over for Kikukawa and other people who have frauded the company and its shareholders of billions of dollars, This is a day that anyone who believes in the rule of law should be celebrating."

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/17/2012 at 10:24 PM
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Check out our Photographer of the Week: D.M.Cevallos

The Photo Art Gallery Photographer of the Week is the wonderful D.M.Cevallos...............

"Hi, my name is Danusia. I always loved photography since I was a child. I have received my diploma of photography from the 'Photography Institute' on June 2009. I love nature and the colors hold a fascination that I cannot resist."

Check out their gallery www.photoartgallery.com/artist/D.M.Cevallos

Here are a couple of gems to whet your appetite.................

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/15/2012 at 8:04 PM
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Happy Valentines 2012!!

Love is in the gallery air! So lets celebrate by sharing your vision of love, with some of the most romantic shots from the gallery!

In order left to right: Thom, yolanda, darvell, lmeeter, jules thomas, jakedfn.

 

To see more member photography check out the search page.

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/14/2012 at 8:24 PM
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World Press 2012 winners

The winners of the 55th World Press Photo competition have been announced. Out of the 101,254 images submitted, the overall winner was announced as Samuel Aranda's touching but powerful image of a woman holding a wounded relative in her arms - the photo was taken inside a mosque turned field hospital during clashes in Sanaa, Yemen last October.


A wide range of topics are covered by the 57 winners, from the Japanese tsunami to conflict and environmental issues. See the full list at the official site www.worldpressphoto.org

Nature, 1st prize singles, Jenny E. Ross. A male polar bear climbs precariously on the face of a cliff above the ocean at Ostrova Oranskie in northern Novaya Zemlya, Russia, attempting to feed on seabird eggs.

 

People in the News, 1st prize stories, Yasuyoshi Chiba. Nozomi Sabanai (left), together with her sister, looks at a catamaran sightseeing boat thrown by the tsunami onto a two-story building, Otsuchi town, Iwate prefecture, Japan.

 


 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/13/2012 at 9:28 PM
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Kodak to stop production of Digital Cameras

As a result of it's financial troubles the Eastman Kodak Company has made the decision to cease production of all it's digital still and video cameras, as well as their digital photo frames over the next few months.



The move according to Kodak is part of their restructuring and will allow them to concentrate on other areas of the business. In an official statement the company listed the products and services that they plan to continue with:

 

  •      Retail-based photo kiosks and digital dry lab systems, a market in which Kodak is the clear worldwide leader. Kodak pioneered the retail-based kiosk market, and the company now has more than 100,000 kiosks and order stations for dry lab systems around the world, with some 30,000 of those units connected to the most popular photo-sharing sites
  •     Consumer inkjet printers, where Kodak has outpaced overall market growth for several years. Kodak consumer inkjet printers provide consumers with high-quality output and the lowest total ink replacement cost. Consumers can send documents and photos to Kodak printers from anywhere, using any web-connected device.
  •     Kodak apps for Facebook, which make it easy for consumers to obtain photo products using photos from their Facebook albums.
  •     Kodak Gallery (www.kodakgallery.com), a leading online digital photo products service. Kodak Gallery enables consumers to share their photos, and offers product and creation tools that enable people to do more with their photos.
  •     The Kodak camera accessories and batteries businesses. These products are universally compatible with all camera brands, and extend into other consumer product segments such as charging units for smartphones.
  •     The traditional film capture and photographic paper business, which continues to provide high-quality and innovative products and solutions to consumers, photographers, retailers, photofinishers and professional labs.

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/10/2012 at 9:55 PM
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Check out our Photographer of the Week: Xhani

The Photo Art Gallery Photographer of the Week is the wonderful xhani...............

Member Xhani aka Koco Xhori is a doctor from Mount Isa, Australia with a flare for photography. His gallery is full of dramatic landscapes, especially check out his night shots!  

Check out their gallery www.photoartgallery.com/artist/xhani

Here are a couple of gems to whet your appetite.................

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/8/2012 at 7:41 PM
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Amateur Photographer Space Images

There are some beautiful images doing the rounds on the internet at the moment of outer space and various planets. The shots are made even more incredible when you learn that they were created by an amateur astronomer who captured them from his front yard.


Reddit user tirceol posted some of his fathers images, which he captured by hooking up a camera to his telescopes eyepiece.

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/7/2012 at 8:48 PM
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Ansel Adams' Los Angeles

Ansel Adams is famously known for his dramatic natural landscapes of America, but back in his day Adams was also taking on less artistic commissions to make ends meat.


For example in the 1940's, Fortune Magazine sent him to document Los Angeles' aviation industry. While there he decided to shoot around the city, giving a facinating vision of a youthful city.

Unfortunately he was unhappy with the results and donated all the shots to the LA Public Library. Where they are now resurfacing as an exhibition in the Drkrm Gallery.  

Get more details of the exhibition at www.drkrm.com/ansel_adams

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/7/2012 at 12:03 AM
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Pro Richard I'Anson Guest Blog

Thank you to today's guest blogger pro Richard I'Anson from the Lonley Planet, who is sharing his tips for coping with all the photographic situations that travelling might throw at you!

Photography Tips for Specific Conditions by Richard I'Anson

Every situation throws up different challenges for the photographer, but shooting when the light is either very low indoors or under the dense canopy of a rainforest or jungle or the very bright conditions often encountered in deserts and around snow consistently raises the most questions.


Indoors in Low Light


When you find yourself in dimly lit interiors, don’t assume you need flash. As a rule, if you can see it you can photograph it. By using a tripod or other camera support you’ll be able to shoot in low-light situations with your preferred sensor setting. Alternatively, increase the sensitivity of your camera’s sensor to hand-hold the camera but be aware at what setting noise will become a problem with your particular sensor. Yes, you can use flash, which is certainly a convenient light source that will let you take a photo even in the darkest places without having to change sensor setting or use a tripod, as long as the subject is within the power range of your unit. However, pictures taken with flash from built-in or hot-shoe mounted units are usually unexceptional. The direct, frontal light is harsh and rarely flattering. It creates hard shadows on surfaces behind the subject and backgrounds are often too dark. Much more visually appealing and creative images can be taken using incandescent, or artificial, light sources such as electric light bulbs, floodlights or candles.


There are good reasons for being prepared to work with the available light. Most importantly, you’ll be able to take pictures in many places where the use of flash is impractical (floodlit buildings, displays behind glass); prohibited (churches, museums, concerts); intrusive (religious ceremonies); or would simply draw unwanted attention to your presence (covered markets, shops and shopping centres).

If your camera’s White Balance control is on automatic check that you’re happy with the way it’s recording the colours in the scene. Remember that the white-balance function adjusts the colours to ensure that white is recorded as white under all lighting conditions. For more accuracy select one of the presets that typically include tungsten and fluorescent-lighting settings. If you’re shooting raw files, you can also fine-tune the white balance in your image-conversion software before processing.

You’ll probably find yourself alternating between low light situations and daylight  (think gallery hopping) so get into the habit of resetting the ISO to the lowest setting, known as the native setting, immediately after you’ve finished shooting at a higher sensitivity, as this is where the sensor will perform at its optimum potential.  It’s easy to be shooting interiors at 800ISO and forget to put it back only to find later that you spent the rest of the day shooting at 800ISO outdoors in bright sunlight.


Rainforests and Jungles


Rainforests and jungles are two of the most difficult landscapes to photograph well. Often the light is too low to hand-hold the camera and causes automatic flashes to fire. If the sun is shining strongly enough to break through the canopy, the trees become speckled with uneven light and pictures will look colourless and messy. The best time to take pictures in these environments is after it has rained, or in light drizzle. The cloudy skies guarantee an even light and the water on the leaves adds life and emphasises the colour.  A polarising filter is very useful as it will cut down the reflections off the wet leaves, increasing the intensity of the colours. However, with lower ISO sensor settings, a polarising filter and low light, shutter speeds will be too slow to hand-hold. A tripod is essential and you’ll be able to precisely control depth of field.  Without a tripod, look for brighter areas where hand-held photography may be possible. You’ll find these around the edges of the treed areas and in clearings near streams, rivers and waterfalls.



Snow, Ice and Glaciers


Snow and ice cause a high level of reflection when they’re the dominant element of a composition and the camera’s light meter will underexpose the scene, particularly on sunny days. To compensate, override the meter. Older cameras may require you to overexpose by one or two stops. Modern cameras with advanced metering systems cope much better, but it’s still worth overexposing by a half stop and one stop until you learn how your camera’s meter performs in different situations. Bracketing in half-stop increments is recommended to guarantee an accurate exposure, as is shooting early or late in the day. The lower angle of the sun brings out detail and texture in the snow and ice and the contrast levels are more manageable.


Be careful using polariser filters for scenes featuring snow and ice. Often blue skies are already very dark and can go almost black. When shooting landscapes in snow be aware of where you’re walking – you could leave your own footprints in an area you want to photograph.
When it’s actually snowing or sleeting a slow shutter speed will allow you to show just how bad the weather was by capturing the falling snow and rain as streaks of colour.


Deserts


Photographing deserts is a little like photographing snow and ice, except you’ll probably be too hot instead of too cold. If conditions are really bright, bracket exposures, favouring overexposure up to one stop. As usual, early-morning and late-afternoon sun will make desert landscapes much more interesting. The low angle of the sun’s rays will emphasise the contours of the dunes and hills and bring out the details an

d textures in the sand and rock. Remember to watch where your own shadow is falling and not to leave footprints in areas you want to portray as pristine. Look for a vantage point to survey the area and walk around the edges of potential picture subjects.


Climb dunes on the shadow side, as you’re less likely to make it a feature of the landscape. Extra attention must be paid to camera care when taking pictures in sandy environments, especially when it’s windy. Only expose you’re camera to the elements when you’re ready to shoot and make sure your bag is properly sealed. A single grain of sand once made one of my auto focus lenses unworkable.

 
Read more in Richard's iBook http://itunes.apple.com/au/book/id437766359#ls=1

and Like him on facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/Richard-IAnson/164126396981890

 

 

 

 

 

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The secret photographer

Vivian Maier was a nanny from Chicago who from the 1950s through to the 70s, driven by a seemingly completely private motivations began taking beautiful street photographs of the world around her.

 


To be specific she took and catalogued some 15,000 images without ever sharing them with the rest of the world. Solitary and extremely driven Vivian showed an amazing natural ability in capturing the essence of Americana.

 


Her images have been salvaged from garage sales from across Chicago and are now in a private collection touring various galleries in the US.

www.vivianmaierprints.com/

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/2/2012 at 12:58 AM
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Check out our Photographer of the Week: Vally

The Photo Art Gallery Photographer of the Week is the wonderful vally...............

"I've always loved photography. Love taking kids photos, but everyone's grown up so I've moved on to macro. Love the close up world, you never know what you're going to find until you go looking. Love this place. It truly inspires me. One day I'm gonna take an awesome landscape."   

Check out their gallery www.photoartgallery.com/artist/vally

Here are a couple of gems to whet your appetite.................

 

 

 

 

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Posted by: Team_Phart
Posted on: 2/1/2012 at 8:03 PM
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