There's a little more than a week until Easter, today I'll share the Easter eggs I only wish I could have made when I was a kid.
Who says math can't be beautiful? Certainly not pugnoM.

Many of these eggs, such as the graph one and the one below, are made using a Ukranian wax-resist method and are called pysanky.

(Photo credit: Amanda Woodward)
I love the "UFO landing" easter egg on the lower right of this picture:

(Photo credit: PugnoM)
Sometimes minimalism is what works best.

(Photo credit: Pam I Am)
But
enough with wax. How about paper? These come from the Easter Egg
Museum in Ukraine, but they're of Polish tradition and design. (In
related news, there's an Easter Egg Museum.)

(Photo credit: abaransk)
Or, if your fine motor skills are anything like mine, you can use film for the really intricate eggs.

(Photo credit: Alex Kapranoff)
You know that phrase "go big or go home?" Yeah, that's what the person who painted this ostrich egg had in mind.

(Photo credit: Jeff/Godfrey)
What I don't like about store-bought dyes is they're so uniform. Not so if you make your own dye...

(Photo credit: - luz -)

(Photo credit: SzymonB)
In Greece, you can buy pre-dyed eggs in markets during the week or so leading up to Easter.
(Photo credit: RobW, who says they're polished with olive oil after being dyed)
Speaking of pretty color...

(Photo credit: hushed_lavinia)

(Photo credit: SavaTheAggie)
The following is the only picture in this post that isn't of real eggs. They're made of wood.

(Photo credit: "Mary")
And finally, please note the majesty of large numbers.

(Photo credit: Paul L. Nettles)

(Photo credit: shannonpatrick17)
Want more pictures? I got pictures. Want more nature? There's plenty of nature to go around.