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  • Money, Poker Chips and playing cards on a green felt poke table showing royal flush
    SV_gambling_IMG_0033.jpg
  • Home care and do it yourself. Fixing a toilet cistern at home
    SL_DIY_LS2_1656.jpg
  • Home care and do it yourself. Fixing a toilet cistern at home
    SL_DIY_LS2_1655.jpg
  • Home care and do it yourself. Fixing a toilet cistern at home
    SL_DIY_LS2_1654.jpg
  • a butler in black suit and bow tie, serving slippers and a cocktail on a tray in a luxury apartment
    AS_buttler_fs_PSh.jpg
  • A piano in a grand hotel in Bangkok, Thailand
    HR_DSC_6140_fs_PSh.jpg
  • Turkey, Antalya, Squat toilet
    IR_Antalya_55258_fs.jpg
  • Russula rosea (synonym Russula lepida), known as the rosy russula, is a north temperate, some consider it edible other inedible, commonly found mushroom of the large "brittlegill" genus Russula. The cap is convex when young, later flat, mostly bright cinnabar to carmine red; often with yellow spots and up to 10 cm in diameter. The gills are pale straw-yellow, brittle, and occasionally with a red edge at the rim of the cap. The spores are pale-cream. The stem is usually flushed carmine, but can be pure white. The flesh is hard and bitter tasting. This mushroom is commonly found in coniferous forests or near beech trees.
    AM_f_Mushroom-671A3193.jpg
  • The red spurfowl (Galloperdix spadicea) is a member of the pheasant family and is endemic to India. It is a bird of forests, and is quite secretive despite its size. It has a distinctive call and is often hard to see except for a few seconds when it flushes from the undergrowth. It appears reddish and like a long-tailed partridge. The bare skin around the eye is reddish. The legs of both males and females have one or two spurs, which give them their name. 18th century watercolor painting by Elizabeth Gwillim. Lady Elizabeth Symonds Gwillim (21 April 1763 – 21 December 1807) was an artist married to Sir Henry Gwillim, Puisne Judge at the Madras high court until 1808. Lady Gwillim painted a series of about 200 watercolours of Indian birds. Produced about 20 years before John James Audubon, her work has been acclaimed for its accuracy and natural postures as they were drawn from observations of the birds in life. She also painted fishes and flowers. McGill University Library and Archives
    IR_f_redspurfowl_gwillim092.jpg
  • The painted spurfowl (Galloperdix lunulata) is a bird of the pheasant family found in rocky hill and scrub forests mainly in peninsular India. Males are more brightly coloured and spotted boldly in white. Males have two to four spurs while females can have one or two of the spurs on their tarsus. The species is found mainly in rocky and scrub forest habitats unlike the red spurfowl. They are found in the undergrowth in pairs or small groups, escaping by running and rarely taking to the wing when flushed. 18th century watercolor painting by Elizabeth Gwillim. Lady Elizabeth Symonds Gwillim (21 April 1763 – 21 December 1807) was an artist married to Sir Henry Gwillim, Puisne Judge at the Madras high court until 1808. Lady Gwillim painted a series of about 200 watercolours of Indian birds. Produced about 20 years before John James Audubon, her work has been acclaimed for its accuracy and natural postures as they were drawn from observations of the birds in life. She also painted fishes and flowers. McGill University Library and Archives
    IR_f_paintedspurfowl_gwillim091.jpg
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