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Posted

Made this last night for a buddy to cheer him up. He's a big Georgia Tech fan and he loved it.

ArtS

Art Schwab

"You cannot teach a man anything. You can only help him discover it within himself." – Galileo Galilei

Posted

Ha ha I love it!

There will bee some stuff with sting in that flask!!!

Bzzbzzbzzbzz (bee clapping hands/wings)

Tom

Confucius - Better a diamond with a flaw than a pebble without.

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Posted

Thanks Tom. It will keep him and his wife warm at the football games!

ArtS

Art Schwab

"You cannot teach a man anything. You can only help him discover it within himself." – Galileo Galilei

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Nice job, Art! Funny stuff, Tom.

You guys are going to get me in trouble with the hubby. We have this mysterious travelling flask in this house. I put it in a cupboard - it shows back up on my work table...

Crystal

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Posted

thats a super bee art!! :thumbsup: ...at first i thought it was for the dodge then i read the georgia part hehe

i think tom was buzzzzzzzzzzzed when he wrote that :crazy:

darryl

Darryl..."Imagination is more important than knowledge"...Albert Einstein...

Posted

Crystal, just make sure you empty it out before he finds it! Of course then you'll have to fill it again and then make sure it's empty ...

ArtS

:rofl::cheers:

Art Schwab

"You cannot teach a man anything. You can only help him discover it within himself." – Galileo Galilei

  • Contributing Member
Posted
  ArtS said:
Crystal, just make sure you empty it out before he finds it! Of course then you'll have to fill it again and then make sure it's empty ...

ArtS

:rofl::cheers:

:rofl: I didn't even think about that. It shows up empty, gets put away empty....mmmm... That may be the missing key to getting inspired to cover it. He didn't say he wanted anything with straight lines... ;)

Crystal

Posted

great job art!!

i haven't done a flask in quite some time.

good looking piece

rmhlogonew.jpg
  • Members
Posted

Love the little flying creature:-)

Good work Art:-)

"He who works with his hands is a laborer.

He who works with his hands, and his head is a craftsman.

He who works with his hands, and his head, and his heart, is An Artist"

http://vildkorpens-laderlya.deviantart.com

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Posted

Hi Art,

Love the flask!

I'm not an authority on football. Is he a bee, a wasp or a hornet? Either way he's bee-autiful!

Shirley

badassseats

As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction is death. ~George Bernard Shaw

  • Moderator
Posted

His name is Buzz and he is a Yellow Jacket.

The "other" Art

  shirleyz said:
Hi Art,

Love the flask!

I'm not an authority on football. Is he a bee, a wasp or a hornet? Either way he's bee-autiful!

Shirley

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

  • Members
Posted
  Art said:
His name is Buzz and he is a Yellow Jacket.

The "other" Art

Hi Other Art,

I looked up Buzz on Wikipedia and I did see that he is indeed a yellow jacket. I don't want to sound dumb, but what is a yellow jacket? I asked my mother-in-law who's from Boston and she said a yellow jacket was a bee, but it might be a wasp, big help. In England we have bees, hornets and wasps. Does he fit in one of those catagories? I need to know!

Shirley

badassseats

As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction is death. ~George Bernard Shaw

  • Moderator
Posted

Hi Shirley,

Yellow Jackets are of the same family as hornets and wasps. They look like a honey bee, but a little larger and no "fur". Around here (mid-Atlantic) they live in colonies in the ground, are right ornery, and can sting multiple times, are predatory insects and can bite (although I have only been stung by one...well more than one). They prey on other insects, and their much larger cousins (hornets) prey on them. They don't like tractors (or anyone driving one), which has made the advent of the pressurized cab a godsend.

Art

  shirleyz said:
Hi Other Art,

I looked up Buzz on Wikipedia and I did see that he is indeed a yellow jacket. I don't want to sound dumb, but what is a yellow jacket? I asked my mother-in-law who's from Boston and she said a yellow jacket was a bee, but it might be a wasp, big help. In England we have bees, hornets and wasps. Does he fit in one of those catagories? I need to know!

Shirley

For heaven's sakes pilgrim, make yourself a strop!

  • Members
Posted

Thanks Art!

badassseats

As long as I have a want, I have a reason for living. Satisfaction is death. ~George Bernard Shaw

Posted

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellowjacket

Yeah we use to call them meatbee's out in california because they like eating any type of animal that is dead. The fresher the better it seemed. That and sugary stuff. Nasty little buggers allthough not as bad as the hornets. Hornets are very very very bad ecspecially if you hit there nest with a weedeater or mower. Man that pisses them off.

Either way they both are bad news if pissed off.

Posted

This time of year they like to get you on trail rides. You have to be ready to take off running! They hit the horses too. It's happened to us more than a few times.

ArtS

Art Schwab

"You cannot teach a man anything. You can only help him discover it within himself." – Galileo Galilei

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