Regular

Here are the kolams and rangolis in this page:
  • Rangoli
  • My Diwali Rangoli
  • Red Devil Mask
  • Balloon dog!
  • Amorphopallus titanum
  • Walking Stick
  • My kolam? no... "ikolam"
  • Pattern using blocks
  • Happy face!
  • Pongal rangoli
Rangoli: Rangoli
Created by r.suganthy on 2009-02-03,

This is the kolam which we drew in our home for pongal using paints, try this.

Rangoli: My Diwali Rangoli
Created by Visitor on 2009-02-03,

This is a picture of my Diwali rangoli and I had made it just before going to school on the day of Diwali. I had only 10 minutes to make it and in those ten minutes managed to fight with my little sister Surya to get the bowl with more color powder in it! I chose to make a "Diya" because I didn't want to pick a big design and risk going to school late. I wonder why my mom doesn't allow me to make my diwali rangolis the night before?

Rangoli: Red Devil Mask
Created by Visitor on 2009-02-03,

I had used two sheets of paper, a scissor, and a glue stick to make this red mask. I drew a mask design on the red paper and cut out the features like the eyes, nose, mouth and the ears. I then placed the black paper underneath my red paper mask to make the pattern stand out. I was pleased with what I had achieved!

Rangoli: Balloon dog!
Created by SuriK on 2009-02-03,

I used a long yellow balloon to make this cute dog. For the eyes, I had used plastic sticky-eyes. I didn't want my dog to feel cold, so I made it wear a blue outfit. Do you like my dog?

Rangoli: Amorphopallus titanum
Created by Lata on 2009-02-03,

Someone once said; “God loved the flowers and invented the soil. Man loved the flowers and so he invented vases”- Vases, so he could bring the flowers inside and bask in its beauty and its fragrance. But today, I am going to talk about a flower which could neither be fitted in a vase, nor could anyone want in his or her living room. The flower is called Amorphophallus Titanium. The flower’s name “Amorphophallus Titanium” literally translates to “the misshapen male organ”.

Titan Arum is a member of the Family Araceae It belongs to the Arum family and is also called arum lily and is native to Sumatra, in Indonesia. T is native to the rain forests of central Sumatra in Indonesia. I met this arum lily at the Conservatory of Flowers, located in the Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. It was on loan from UC Davis botanical rare plant is housed. It blooms once in a few years. The last bloom display was at this conservatory a few years ago, last week of May 2005.

"Ted the Titan," a corpse flower, attracted more than 16,000 visitors while in bloom, In 1878 an Italian botanist, Odoardo Beccari, discovered it in Sumatra. In the UK, the plant was first brought to flower at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, in 1889.
When it bloomed again in 1926 police had to be brought in to control the crowds. On August 2, 1999 Amorphophallus titanium achieved full bloom at the Huntington Botanic Garden in San Marino, California. This was only the 11th recorded bloom in the United States and the first ever in California. Equally astonishing was the number of people who came to visit this magnificent plant on the peak day of its blooming period, over 10,000 admirers.
The bloom is composed of a creamy colored spadix and a maroon colored spathe. The spadix with many tiny male and female flowers at its base can be up to 12 feet tall. The large frilly-edged leafy structure pale green, petal-like spathe enclosing the spadix is called the spathe. The spathe, which is a highly modified leaf, has been measured to be up to 3 feet across. The completely unfurled spathe resembles an upturned fluted bell with a maroon interior. Male and female flowers are separate, with the female flowers receptive first, the male flowers releasing pollen the next day; this ensures cross-pollination. A plant cannot produce seed unless pollen is provided from another plant. The spathe unfurls about 3 weeks after the bud tip first appears; at our plant's growth rate (4 inches per day), during the time the flower is dormant; an enormous leaf erupts from the soil and photosynthesizes to store energy for producing a new flower. The leaf can get up to 20 feet high and have a palmy leaf 15 feet wide!

Rangoli: Walking Stick
Created by SuriK on 2009-02-03,

I had made this stick bug project for my first-grade science project (last year). I collected twigs, leaves and sticks and used my old shoe box to make a home for my bug. The body of this bug looks like a stick, and so I made the body out of thin sticks that were glued together at the joints. For the eyes, I used tiny black peppercorns. Everyone had fun looking at my project, and I was happy to talk about my stick but in the class.
Can you spot my stick bug? Look closely!

Rangoli: My kolam? no... "ikolam"
Created by rajamma_2 on 2009-02-03,

Dotted ikolam. 15 to 1 straight dots. The letters got scattered to form this design.

Rangoli: Pattern using blocks
Created by SuriK on 2009-02-03,

Surya made this Rangoli with wooden puzzle pieces.

Rangoli: Happy face!
Created by SuriK on 2009-02-03,
This rangoli was published on 2009-02-03.
Rangoli: Pongal rangoli
Created by krithikaa21 on 2009-02-03,

In front of our house I drew this on pongal day with colours.

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