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Button Jar at a antique store

CCB - Lisboa - Portugal

Button the bunny has been a bit poorly recently - and part of the treatment involves her being sat up in this funny position... I have been itching to get a photo of her, especially to get a view of her great teeth!

Shot on 120 format Fuji Provia 100F film using a Mamiya RB67 Pro S body and a 127mm lens on a Manfrotto tripod. Scanned using a Nikon Super Coolscan 9000 ED dedicated film scanner.

 

I have wanted to get a good photo of the button factory for a while. I'll have to keep trying.

Zooanthus sp. The Deep, Hull, UK.

Button Poms (Pompons) are popular accent flowers used in bouquets. They look quite different when they are viewed close up than they do in real life.

 

View On Black

Display of sewing buttons in an old (Mason) Jar. Lincoln Nebraska USA

Button DownBlouse

Inktober 2025 prompt "Button"

Colette Patterns Pastille dress with a few changes! Blogged about here:

vintagedreamer95.blogspot.com/2014/12/button-up-colette-p...

At Jenkins Arboretum

Reaching for the Moon: Make a Button Collage || Simple craft for toddlers and preschoolers who are starting to study astronomy

 

Source by adventureinabox

  

sharekid.com/button-moon-collage/

 

#ShareKid

One of these don't belong with the others...

So I'm starting to rock n roll with my new serger making tops and skirts.

 

Button Making activity hosted by CSM Library Makerspace & conducted by Bryan Gerbig.

 

October 4, 2014 at College of San Mateo Family Science & Astronomy Festival + Makerspace.

French knots on cotton fabric using a variety of silk and silk blend threads and a few seed beads

Cutwork button---this is my second attempt because on the first one I had too much lace and it looked like a sunflower.

The base fabric is cream duchess satin and the lace is cream as well.

The centre section is a piece of cream silk organza that had cutwork on it and I layered it on top of a piece of pale pink cotton Voile.

I had much difficulty attaching the lace--my fingers are too short and stubby to handle fiddly bits.

Day 339-- I am thankful for the baby who stretched my perfect, beautiful, little belly button into a strange, diagonal, half-in-half-out double navel curiousity.

 

I am also thankful for the wisdom to know that some day I will miss this funny little belly the way I now miss my old, culturally "perfect" belly.

 

I didn't edit out any of my stretch marks, because that would have defeated the purpose of this photo altogether. You can even see the one that cuts through my stretched-out birthmark. And yet, I really like this.

Taken on 5 April 2014, taken using Minolta 110 Zoom SLR Mark II. This particular walk button is located near the Royal Hotel in Upper Ferntree Gully, Victoria, Australia.

This button placement certainly seems odd to me (I don't think I'll EVER button it) but I do love the button that I chose and the little loop is pretty cute. It can just always stay open. No problem.

 

Really, I have a few other bones to pick with the pattern too, from the too-short length to the fact that the placket is supposed to be made REALLY long and then sewn partway shut (??) to the unfinished seams on the inside (I made some of them into French seams to at least cut down on the raw edges a little bit).

 

And please don't pay attention to the poor quality of my bias-tape-sewing there. That part was done about 4 years ago, when I'd really not done much sewing at all.

I made this tote bag using some durable 100% cotton drill fabric. I have painstakingly sewn each vintage button on with my own two hands :o)

This bag is available in my mintd.com store. For more information, please see my profile.

A small wooden button worn by time.

Closer look at one of the large stands

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