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How to represent leaves in a picture


    Ian, please charge for three images but draw as one. The following three images will be used together as shown here and separately (see following three images). Kathy will separate them, but refer to notes for the next three images to help you with the details.


Maple Leaf emoji

The Maple Leaf emoji depicts the distinctive leaf of a maple tree. It is commonly used to represent maple trees, leaves, and the autumn season.

Because the maple leaf is a national symbol of Canada and is depicted on the country’s flag (represented in emoji form as the Flag of Canada ), the Maple Leaf emoji is often used to refer to Canada, Canadian people and things, and Canadian holidays such as Canada Day (July 1).

The Maple Leaf emoji was approved under Unicode 6.0 in 2010. On all major platforms, the emoji depicts a single, five-pointed leaf of a maple tree positioned with the stem located at the bottom of the leaf. Depending on the platform, the color of the leaf may be red, reddish-orange, orange, or yellow. The Twitter version of the emoji is nearly identical to the maple leaf featured on the national flag of Canada (Flag of Canada emoji ).

Maple trees are a common type of tree native to Asia, Europe, North America, and northern Africa. The Maple Leaf emoji is commonly used to refer to these trees. More generally, the Maple Leaf emoji is used to refer to leaves of trees in general. This is especially common during the fall season, when leaves change color and often resemble the reddish-orange color usually depicted by the Maple Leaf emoji .

The Maple Leaf emoji is frequently used to refer to Canada and is often used alongside the Flag of Canada emoji . This usage is especially common on Twitter because the Twitter version of the Maple Leaf emoji is nearly identical to the maple leaf depicted on the Canadian flag.

The Maple Leaf emoji is commonly used alongside other leaf-based emoji, including Fallen Leaf and Leaf Fluttering in the Wind . It is also often paired with other fall-themed emoji, such as Jack-O’-Lantern .

Note: the Maple Leaf emoji is sometimes used in reference to cannabis (marijuana) due to a basic resemblance in leaf shape.




How to represent leaves in a picture

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  • Please draw a plant with very green leaves and fibrous roots.


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  • Please draw a tree with roots in a similar fashion as plants with roots illustration. This will be another background for a draw tool.
  • 2/5 — This tree is actually supposed to have roots, (very similar in composition as plant with roots). One last hitch is that this sketch will be going into a landscape aspect ratio drawing tool, so if you could make the tree wider, have the branches and roots fill more horizontal space, that would be great.


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  • Please draw an herb type plant which has a number of roots that branch off each other. No single root growth is thicker or longer than the other and it they have small root hairs to take in additional water and nutrients from the soil.


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• This is one illustration combining the two in the original sketch. Begin by drawing stomata on the back of a leaf as in the upper left of original, only make sure background clearly resembles the underside of a leaf. Draw the Stomata in a similar fashion to the bottom right in original.

• Circle one stoma and draw in detail label only the Stomatal Opening, calling it simply “the opening”. Include the arrow.

• Match color scheme of this original sketch.

• Title entire drawing at the bottom “Stomata”

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    Ian, please charge for three images but draw as one. The following three images will be used together as shown here and separately (see following three images). Kathy will separate them, but refer to notes for the next three images to help you with the details.

The goal of pictures is to show all the kinds of parts of a plant. (ex. Roots can be tap root or fibrous, leaves can be large like palm leaves or thin like pine needles, stems can be thick like tree trunks or thin. These pictures will be repeated through out the rest of the lesson. All the pictures need to show both above and below ground views.

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Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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