Happiness is knowing there is dessert in the fridge. Especially this tender, creamy delicious Butterfly Pea Flower Coconut Milk Pudding will surely bring you joy! Take a bite, and feel the creamy pudding melt in your mouth, followed by a sweet and fresh taste of coconut. This treat is best served cold, making it the perfect summer treat! Experience the color-changing magic of Suncore Foods® Butterfly Pea Flowers and color your ordinary pudding a dreamy, cool blue. This lovely blue hue can instantly cool down your day! Try this refreshing recipe at SuncoreFoods.com and make it magical with our flowers. First comes love, then comes dessert!
Yardener.com is a gardening website containing gardening tips to help Yardeners solve virtually any problem in caring for the plants on the property.: Yardener.com
Salvia azurea, or Blue Sage, blooms for an extended period in late summer with bright blue flowers that really stand-out in a crowd. As with other Salvias, the leaves are very aromatic. Indigenous in the southern and western prairie states …
Which of these Spring STEAM activities for kids will you try in your classroom? Teach about flowers, butterflies, birds, plants, and more!
This Garden sign is all weather resistant made of a poly-resin address bracket with UV inhibitor to prevent fading. The post is available in 48" or 58" lengths - powder coated black. (powder coating is a baked-on paint). The lettering is super reflective...made of an engineer-grade material (not painted on). They will not crack or peel off and are on both sides. Can be done with any name. For example Nana's PawPaw's Garden Garden Please enter the name in the "comments to seller" or "personalization" upon check out. Limited to two lines. See my other products on my Etsy store - www.Etsy.com/shop/911AddressSigns
Create a bright and beautiful display while encouraging students to reflect on how they can be mindful. This kit is very low prep– print the monarchs on colored paper and have students cut them out, or print on white paper and let the students color them. The monarchs say, "I can be mindful by..." on one wing, with space for students to list three ways to be mindful on the other three wings. Blank butterflies are also included! Product includes multiple versions to best suit your students: Here's what you'll get: Full & half page butterflies Butterflies with standard & primary lines Blank butterflies Heading "We Are Mindful Monarchs" as a multi-page version with large words, as well as a one-page version. There is a version with "mindful" in cursive, as well as in print for younger students. Headers with the hashtags #mindfulness and #soaring Editable Powerpoint file so you can add any prompt you like Teachers like you said: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This is one of my favorite purchases! The butterflies turned out beautiful and writing on them allowed my students to really think. -C.A. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ This made a great bulletin board for the spring. We did the Mindful Monarchs a week before testing to remind ourselves of strategies we have to stay calm, present, and cool down when feeling overwhelmed. Love it! -Samantha C. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ The mindful butterfly display was stunning! The students had so much fun engaging in this activity. They each wrote down four things they like to do during their personal mindful moment. It was a very meaningful activity for all. -Terri L. Want your bulletin boards taken care of for the whole year? Snag the Monthly Bulletin Board Bundle! Looking for more mindful resources? ➡ 100 Editable Growth Mindset Writing Prompt Slides {Cactus Theme} ➡ Growth Mindset Posters {Mountain Theme} ➡ End of the Year Growth Mindset Reflection Journal I LOVE to see my products in action, so please tag me @thedesignerteacher if you share a photo! Don't forget to follow The Designer Teacher and leave feedback to earn TPT credits! Copyright ⓒ The Designer Teacher All rights reserved by author. For single classroom use only.
Flower Power healing with flowers for the Taurus New Moon!
Here are 100 expert gardening tips, ideas and projects you should do this weekend to add charm to your garden.
Flickr is nothing without you, our community. We want to make sure this community continues to thrive, grow, and inspire, so we've made some big changes.
Ever since I was a little girl, I've had a fascination with fairies. There are so many stories about them in so many cultures and traditions that I can't help but wonder whether there is some basis in truth for their existence.
This is part 1 of a 2-part post on the life and works of British illustrator Edward Julius Detmold (1883 – 1957). Edward and his twin brother Charles Maurice Detmold (1883 – 1908) were born in London in 1883. They were tutored by an uncle who fostered their artistic talents and their love of natural history. Their animal subjects were always among the most sensitive of their drawings. Prodigious early talents, they exhibited watercolours at the Royal Academy when they were 13 and had a portfolio of etchings issued in 1898. The brothers worked jointly on their etchings and illustrations. Their first book illustrations were produced jointly for the 1899 Pictures From Birdland. Their next project, at the age of 20, was a portfolio of sixteen watercolours inspired by Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book. They were well on their way to joint and individual success when Maurice suddenly committed suicide in 1908 – he was twenty-four years of age. No satisfactory explanation for the act has even been given. The coroner's inquest returned a verdict of suicide 'whilst unsound of mind' and there was apparently a note as well. Edward was stunned by the sudden death of his twin, but managed to continue on with his art. His next book illustrations practically defined him to his publishers and their patrons. These were the 1909 The Fables of Aesop for which he did twenty-three colour plates and numerous pen and ink chapter headings. Then came Maurice Maeterlink's The Life of the Bee and Birds and Beasts and The Book of Baby Beasts in 1911. In 1912, it was the Book of Baby Birds and Hours of Gladness. Other books had titles like The Book of Baby Pets and The Book of Baby Dogs (1915), Our Little Neighbours and Fabre's Book of Insects (1921) - all reflecting the natural history that had so fascinated him as a youngster. Even when he branched out, as he theoretically did in 1924 with his The Arabian Nights, he was just as likely to choose animals to illustrate as he was to depict humans. It was to be his last illustrated work. In 1921 he had written a tract to attempt to explain himself, his work and his life. To quote from Keith Nicholson's introductory essay in The Fantastic Creatures of Edward Julius Detmold: "A decade of intense activity was drawing to a close. Detmold could look back upon some fine achievements, but he was disillusioned with many of the uninspiring commissions for children's books he had undertaken. A pointless and destructive world war emphasized his worst forebodings of man's direction in the new century. The happiness of his childhood and the loss of his twin brother, now recollected in an uneasy tranquillity, combined to produce an existential crisis in the artist. In the wake of feeling that life for him had become meaningless and intolerable, he produced a literary work which testifies to his readings in Schopenhauerian pessimism and the Buddhist philosophy of the Upanishadr and the Bhagavad-Gita. Life, his only un-illustrated work, a book of aphorisms, was published by J. M. Dent in 1921. A key book to an understanding of Detmold's mind, Life is an inauspicious-looking small volume printed on one side of the leaf only. In his preface the author writes: `The following words have come to the writer, over a period of many years, as the fruits of self-overcoming.' From the curious, mystical text we learn that there are two ways of attainment: `The direct positive way - through progressive liberation - passing from the lesser realisation of the body, to the greater realisation of the mind, and therefrom to the realisation of the infinite through the soul; and the direct negative way -through disillusionment - which comes of infatuation with things in themselves, and the inevitable passing thereof.' In the event, Life was Detmold's farewell to the public world of books, and his testament." Resigned from the world, Detmold went to live in Montgomeryshire where, after a long retirement and almost totally forgotten, he died in July, 1957. Strangely, there exists no official record of his death, though it is believed that he too committed suicide. Amapolas from 'News of spring and other nature studies' 1917 At the Edge of the Lotus Pool etching and drypoint Birds in a Nest Catasetum y Cypripedium from 'News of spring and other nature studies' 1917 Cockerel etching Coryanthes Maculata from 'News of spring and other nature studies' 1917 Espinas from 'News of spring and other nature studies' 1917 From 'Birds and Beasts' 1911 From 'Birds of Town and Village' 1920 From 'Birds of Town and Village' 1920 From 'Birds of Town and Village' 1920 From 'Fabre's Book of Insects' 1921 From 'Fabre's Book of Insects' 1921 From 'Fabre's Book of Insects' 1921 From 'Fabre's Book of Insects' 1921 From 'Fabre's Book of Insects' 1921 From 'Hours of Gladness' From 'The Book of Baby Birds' 1912 From 'The Book of Baby Birds' 1912 From 'The Book of Baby Birds' 1912
Echinacea purpurea, commonly known as Purple Coneflower, stands out as a beloved perennial choice, gracing gardens with its profusion of daisy-like flowers—a
Hydrangeas, gardenia, butterfly bush and more all top the list of gorgeous summer-flowering shrubs. See the full list at HGTV Gardens.
Why is the astrantia or masterwort (Astrantia major and other species) so little known? It has everything it takes toContinue Reading
.css-1sgivba{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;-webkit-flex-direction:row;-ms-flex-direction:row;flex-direction:row;gap:0.5rem;margin-bottom:var(--chakra-space-2);} .css-cosgki{font-size:16px;font-weight:var(--chakra-fontWeights-bold);} Product Type: Giclee Print Print Size: 16" x 24" Finished Size: 16" x 24" .css-1336n79{display:-webkit-box;display:-webkit-flex;display:-ms-flexbox;display:flex;-webkit-align-items:center;-webkit-box-align:center;-ms-flex-align:center;align-items:center;-webkit-flex-direction:row;-ms-flex-direction:row;flex-direction:row;gap:0.5rem;margin-top:var(--chakra-space-8);margin-bottom:var(--chakra-space-8);} Product ID: 22113862327A
Often referred to as the purple shamrock, this beautiful and curious plant actually has nothing to do with Ireland—it comes from Brazil! Oxalis triangularis has stunning triangular, three-lobed leaves—each lobe like a pair of butterfly wings—in vivid purple-maroon and shades of wine-red. In summer, the leaves are accompanied by numerous small, trumpet-shaped pinkish or white blooms. These are attractive in their own right, but it’s the leaves that are the real stars of the show. Incidentally, the foliage has a photonastic response—in other words, the leaves open up during the day and close again at night! Oxalis triangularis subsp. papilionacea may be grown to plant outdoors in summer pots, or a position at the front of the border. It is, however, a frost-tender plant: it might survive outdoors over winter in warm, sheltered gardens, but expect to give it some winter protection. Luckily, it does adapt very well to indoor conditions, and it can survive and indeed thrive, for many years as a long-lived houseplant.
The Awesomely Artistic stamp set, by Stampin' Up!, is used to create a card for The Paper Players card challenge.