View allAll Photos Tagged Bedding,
And wow, this scene in the Land's End department is so warm, cozy, and even Christmas-y, that you wouldn't even know it was a liquidation scene if not for that gaudy sign on the mall entrance window in the far left of the photo!
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Sears, 1996-built (closed early 2019), Germantown Pkwy. at Hwy 64, Memphis
New bedding pattern. Also, do you like my distressed bed? I'll blog about the process shortly and share the technique.
Update: technique for ageing the bed is now on my blog
Auburn, NY. June 2020.
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What do you do when you want to go to sleep, but your bed looks so beautiful with the new quilt and pillows that you don't want to ruin the effect?
I guess Ellie will be sleeping on the sofa tonight.
Thank you to Angie Coppi for the gorgeous bedding set. She hand-sewed the quilt (which is very detailed, with lace, beads, and quilted hearts), using colors that I requested; she also hand-sewed the matching pillows and sleep mask; and she knitted the amazing throw from bamboo yarn--which I've never heard of before--it is extremely soft and beautiful. This is Angie's half of a swap we are doing...I am still working on my package for her. I think I need to "up" my game a little, in light of these fabulous gifts!
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This photo is exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed, written permission of the author. If you are interested, you should write me to pdiazmolins@yahoo.es
Blasdell, NY. June 2018.
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Not for sure what this smallish room in the interior of the store was for. The white walls might indicate it was once an optical center, but this window suggests it was used as a parts and service center. Whatever it was, it had been stripped down to the point of being unrecognizable by the end of the liquidation.
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Sears, 1968-built (closed March 2017), S. Caraway Rd. at E. Highland Dr., Jonesboro AR
Home furnishings and bedding/bath seemed to be generating the most interest while we were at this Kmart liquidation, as evidenced by the nearly empty shelving seen here!
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Kmart, 1979-80 built, Caraway Rd. at E. Highland Dr., Jonesboro AR
pillow cases and blanket for the upcoming hot hot summer.
soft blue is always my choice for summer. and double gauze fabric is great great for making beddings. soft, cool, easy for washing.
Fabirc-nami iro double gauze cotton fabric.
My neighbour brought over all this moss that he had raked up so that I can use it in the sheep shed as bedding. The Girls are eating all the straw that I put down for their bedding so I thought that I'd try this because they don't usually eat moss... hmmmm... we'll see. You may see the next photo of them covered in moss because it'll stick like velcro to their wool, unless they eat it all first.
With no real frontal lighting, bar a few peripheral rays from an open workshop door, the little PowerShot has done pretty well with this record shot of Nos.17246 & 16657 bedding down for t' night.
All rights reserved - Copyright Pedro Díaz Molins© [Facebook] [500px] [Web]
This photo is exclusive property and may not be copied, downloaded, reproduced, transmitted, manipulated or used in any way without expressed, written permission of the author. If you are interested, you should write me to pdiazmolins@yahoo.es
Springville, NY. February 2017.
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| Location: Elmwood, Philadelphia
View all of my work at this link... www.tonyjuliano.com/
Part of my "Streets of Philadelphia" project.
View the rest, here... Streets Of Philadelphia
I bought a Canon SX160 at a thrift store today for $10. However the date battery was dead, and when it's dead you have to enter the date and time every time you turn it on. So I went over to Batteries Plus but they had a sign on the window that said, "Back in 10 Minutes."
So while I was waiting I took a few photos, one of which was this of the flower bed on the side of the store. I then ran it through a few filters on PhotoScape.
I intend to use this camera at work to replace an older Canon point and shoot.
A beautiful example of cross bedding in the sandstone rocks in the Amphitheater walls of Snow Canyon State Park.
The town of Towitta was surveyed in 1876 on a former Travelling Stock Route with a good water supply from a spring and the nearby hills. It was proclaimed in 1876 but some farmers took up their land from 1868 as the Hundred of Jellico was declared in 1851 although surveying of land did not begin on the Murray Flats part of this Hundred until the late 1860s. Many of those who took up land here were Wends or Sorbs including Matthes Schippan. Towitta had a few houses, a creek, a church, a cemetery, a Post Office and a school. The school opened in 1880 and finally closed in 1957. The state school began operations in the Wesleyan Church until a school room was built in 1894. When it opened the school had around 27 pupils. A new state school and teacher’s residence was built in the town in 1922. Like all small villages it had a Post Office from 1876 until the 1970s. Despite the German and Wendish background of many settlers the only church built in Towitta was the Wesleyan Methodist Church built in 1874. It closed in 1897 and was purchased by the Congregational Church who used it until 1963 when it permanently closed. As there was no Lutheran cemetery in town the local Wendish and Lutheran settlers used the town cemetery for burials. The earliest burials here occurred in 1885. Some names in the Towitta cemetery are: Harris, Baker, Mullighan, Henke, Kalesch, Mattschoss, Schrapel, Wohlgemuth etc. By 1902 around the time of the Towitta murder the town had a population of 75 people with about 15 dwellings. The greatest population from the censuses for Towitta was in 1911 when it had a population of 186 people in the village and district.
Most people had not heard of Towitta until 1 January 1902 when a famous and puzzling murder took place there. Mary Schippan, 24 years of age (born 1877), was charged with the murder of her sister Bertha Schippan who was 14 years old. On the night of the murder the Schippan parents, Matthes and Johanne Schippan (neé Dohnt of Eden Valley), were away visiting relatives in Eden Valley. They had purchased their Towitta property in 1881 having had a lease before that. On the night of the murder Mary said she was awoken in the night by a man in their bedroom and the screams of her sister Bertha. But she managed to escape. Her two brothers sleeping away from the house in an outbuilding were called for help and came to Mary’s assistance. The three siblings, without going back into the family home, then walked to a neighbour’s house for help but could find no one to assist. When they returned to their own home they called out for Bertha but there was no answer. Fearing the worst the three then walked to the nearest constable for help a local farmer named Lambert. When constable Lambert returned with the three siblings they found the battered body of sister Bertha with her throat slashed five times. The Schippan parents returned from Eden Valley the next day and a short inquest was held in the Schippan home before Bertha was quickly buried. The murder was a gruesome one and Bertha’s body was quickly buried the next morning by the Schippan family in the Sedan cemetery. It was later exhumed twice for further investigations. For the first time in SA the Advertiser newspapers used a motor vehicle for their on the spot reporter to gather information which was relayed to Adelaide from the telegraph station in Angaston. The murder story was reported nationally and made headlines for months. In a second inquest Mary’s illicit sexual relationship with Gustav Nitschke was revealed by him thus destroying the reputation of Mary Schippan and shifting the blame to her. Mary was then convicted by the Coroner of murdering her sister to prevent Bertha from revealing the relationship with Nitschke to her father Matthes. Mary was sent to Adelaide Gaol to await a formal trial. Her trial opened in March 1902 in front of Chief Justice Sir Samuel Way and Sir Josiah Symon. After a trial of six days the jury took just two hours to deliver a verdict of “not guilty”. Mary was released, Gustav Nitschke was discredited and the family returned to Towitta.
Thirty policemen were assigned to the case to find answers about the murder but the evidence was lost in dust and heat and time. There were tales of the illicit romance of Mary and Gustav and the Wendish community only partially sympathised with and supported Mary Schippan and her family. The Court heard that Mary was having an illicit romantic affair with Gustav Nitschke and that her younger sister Bertha had found out. This was circumstantial evidence only. Were Bertha to have told her father he would have been furious and there would have been repercussions for Mary. This evidence upset the Nitschke family who then claimed that Mary’s father had committed the murder. They claimed he could have ridden down from Eden Valley in the dark and committed the murder and returned back to Eden Valley before dawn. Nitschke senior actually had an alibi as he was in Adelaide on the knight of the murder and so he was removed from suspicion but he was well known and was treated with suspicion by the public. He soon moved interstate and changed his name to Gus Nicholls. But in the Court trial of 1902 the lack of any evidence against Mary’s and her clear love for her sister led to her eventually acquittal. No other suspect was found. The head of Bertha Schippan was removed from her body when it was exhumed and it was examined in Adelaide but to no avail. It was later reburied with poor Bertha in Sedan cemetery. The summation of Justice Josiah Symon heavily criticised the acts and behaviour of the Coroner who was under the influence of the police when he was at Towitta. Symon also criticised the police for not examine in detail the report of unknown foot prints at the Schippan farm gate. Here are some major points from Justice Josiah Symon’s summation:
•Mary had no motive to murder her sister and she was subject to cruel, unjust and relentless persecution. He was referring not only to the police and coroner but also the media. This has overtones of what happened to Lindy Chamberlain 80 years later.
•It was not creditable for Mary to murder her sister with whom she was sharing a bed and there was no proof.
•When Mary saw Bertha’s bodies she burst into tears but it was reported that she was unemotional.
•Mary was under police surveillance from Jan 2 and they sought to find evidence to convict her not prove her innocence.
•We had furniture, bed cloths, and bedding saturated in blood. Why did Mary have almost no blood on her?
•The Coroner gave evidence based on assumption only. No one could tell the age of the blood stains.
•Why did the Crown drag Nitschke into the court to destroy the reputation of Mary? Only to try and give Mary a motive.
•The police did not look after the evidence and bundled it all together so that no piece of evidence could be free from blood stains.
•The police covered up the set of foot prints going up the lane to the Schippan cottage. Why? Did they cover them because they trembled for their (prosecution) case?
•Five days after the murder they bought a blacktracker when he could find nothing and do nothing.
•When Mary went to her brothers and woke them she asked then to put out their light as she thought she had been followed. They cowered there in fright. Later they returned with pitchforks as they feared a man might still be in the house.
•Despite clams Mary did not wash her hair the next morning at the neighbour’s house only her face and hands. She was not trying to remove blood from her hair.
•Mary’s blouse had only a few tiny specs of blood on it and she wore her stockings all evening and when with the local constable.
•There were some blood stains on Mary’s skirt but she had killed a sheep a few days before. Were the stains human blood or other mammalia?
•There were one hair from Mary’s head on the towel near the body but how did it get there? The towel had been used for a week by the entire family for washing hands etc.
•When Bertha’s body was exhumed 13 days after burial one of Mary’s hairs was found on the hands of Bertha. Is that reliable?
•The Coroner argued the wound was inflicted by a right handed person on Bertha but Mary is left handed.
•The police never found a knife only those used for killing sheep and another household knife which did not fit the murder.
But the rumours persisted and the reputation of the family was destroyed despite them trying to keep to themselves in Towitta. In 1908 they left Towitta for a property at Lights Pass near Nuriootpa. Previous to this they had built a new cottage on their property which still stands today but it is not the original thatched cottage where the murder took place. That was demolished. Matthes Schippan died in 1911 and was buried in the Strait Gate Lutheran Church at Lights Pass under the name of Martin Schippan. Mary and her mother left Lights Pass in 1917. Mary went to a convalescent home in Adelaide because of her tuberculosis. Johannes moved in with her son August at Mount Mary. Mary never married and lived the life of a recluse with her mother most of her life. As she approached death she was moved from Adelaide to her mother and brother at Mount Mary. She died of tuberculosis at the early age of 41 years at Mount Mary and was buried in St Peter’s Lutheran cemetery at Bower in 1919. Her mother Johannes later moved to Eudunda and died there in 1923. She was buried in the Eudunda general cemetery.
The Kanab Sand Caves are found in the sandstone/siltsone cliff are nestled almost at the top of the Kayenta Formation. Just above them (visible top left in this photo) is the Navajo Sandstone.
These caves were formed in the 1930s and 1940s to mine sand. The sand mined from these caves was used to make glass and make molds for casting iron. The choice to mine sand at this location was made due to the softness of the rock and the relatively easy access, walking up the side of the cliff.
There is some spectacular cross bedding (evidence of ancient sand dunes) that you see as you walk along the cliff face and that you climb along as you hike up to the caves. The cross bedding is very evident in this photo.
You can download bedding for girls, teen bedroom, bedroom in your computer by clicking resolution image in Download by size:. Don't forget to rate and comment if you interest with this wallpaper.
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I stopped by the store to check out hooks for my Landing Strip and discovered this bedding on sale for about 57% off. Grabbed the bedskirt and all the shams. It might go back, I have massive trepidation. But, uh, reeaaallllyyy love it!
a few white bedding Dahlias i have. Amazingly these have been in the ground now for 7/8 years. Never dug up for winter, just left in the ground with no extra protection. Years ago my Father used have to dig up his Dahlias & store in a clamp to protect from frost, another sign of global warming