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Fabric Knot Buttons.
From hand made ribbon:
I hand cut, heat sealed all edges, rolled and heat secured these strips of matterial for home made rolled fabric ribbons.
Knotted and glued securely into place. The crafter will sew the back side of the button directly to their project.
I think I have seen all 5 in the conservatory now. Each one is completely different looking from the other 4. The name finally came to me - Button Quail. Actually it turns out they're not really quail at all. Just about every website deals exclusively with their behavior in captivity. They are bred, bought and sold and kept as pets and in aviaries. The 5 in the conservatory are become much tamer than they used to be. This is the best link I could find.....
Picture of the button they give you this year to tour the lavender farms and ride the shuttles.
http://camknows.blogspot.com/2009/07/sequim-lavender-festival-2009.html
Button eyes - what do they see?
HUSKER DU - "Push The Button"
Hear the sirens in the afternoon
Enemy missile gonna hit us soon
Casualties will be gigantic
Run down the street and panic
Push the button baby
Freak out, overreact
Push the button baby
Attack Attack Attack Attack
Living underground is no fun
Can't talk to anyone
Ain't got no outside influence
Staying alive by civil defense
Turn your TV to a defense station
They'll provide emergency information
Hide in a cave if you know what's best
Announcer says, "No, this is not a test"
In April 1955 30 buttons were attached to this 10 3/4'' x 13'' piece of cardboard that was from a sign in Emmaus, PA as seen on the back of this display. Some of the buttons are missing. There seems no theme to this BUTTON DISPLAY CARD so it may have been a child that was given the cardboard and buttons to keep them busy. There are some celluloid buttons, metal buttons, plastic and glass on this display.
THIS CARD IS FOR DISPLAY ONLY-NOT FOR SALE
Interesting Button Photograph sporting a heavily varnished Salt Print, or possibly, Albumen print.
The reverse can be seen here:
Button Point, Nevada, just east of Winnemucca. Early evening light looking southwest with I-80 in the distance. Dave Stanley photo ©2025
My sister buttoning my dress up
Photo by Elyse Kufeldt Photography -- www.elysekufeldtphotography.com
Molly Button on the campus of Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Illinois on July 28, 2016. (Jay Grabiec)
handgemachte PACMAN-button im fünfer-set, jetzt neu im shop von www.PIXELKITSCH.de
pixelkitsch.blogsport.de/2011/03/28/pacman-button-fuer-mo...
My sister gave me this incredible button. It is really black glass and then treated on the front with carving and some green paint. Not sure how they do this.
My God-child Amy went to the doctor today to have her adenoids taken
out. While they were up in her nose, the found something odd: a
button, which had apparently been in there for a few weeks. They even
let her bring the button home.
Thanks to Mimi The Shutterbug I finally know a bit about this sculpture. It's named "Lorrie's Button" and was placed here in 1976
They don't make button trims as funky as they did in the 1970's ~ and they certainly don't price them in old AND new money.
(From the Nicholas Thompson collection).
Button Gwinnett, for whom this county was named, was born in Gloucestershire, England, in 1735, the son of a Church of England minister. He worked in the store of his father-in-law in Dexter for two years, then as an importer and exporter for three years. In 1765 he came to Georgia, opening a store in Savannah. The same year he sold his store, bought St. Catherines Island and moved onto it, becoming a familiar figure at Sunbury and Midway Church.
Button Gwinnett was elected Justice of the Peace in 1767; Commissioner of Pilotage in 1768; member of the Georgia Assembly (legislature) in 1769. He was sent to the Continental Congress early in 1776 and signed the Declaration of Independence Aug. 2, 1776. He later served as Speaker of the Assembly and was one of the chief drafters of the first State Constitution.
Mr. Gwinnett was chosen to fill the unexpired term of Archibald Bulloch as President of the Executive Council, or Provisional Governor of Georgia, on March 4, 1777. He served only a few months before being defeated for re-election by Governor John A. Treutlen. Politics resulted in a duel in which Gov. Gwinnett was killed by Gen. Lachlan McIntosh on May 16, 1777, and buried in an unknown, unmarked grave. He left so few signatures that one autograph sold for $51,000.
067-1 1954
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I am pretty certain a Gwinnett memorial has been erected at Colonial Park in Savannah. I need to get a decent photo of it. Sunlight is harsh at the park.
Wings are made with Basic Grey papers, images are vintage Ziegfeld girls, vintage buttons and millinery.
This button reversible skirt is made from jersey fabric.Its very comforable and can be worn casually or dressed up for a night out! The reverse side of the skirt is plain blue jersey.This is a small- medium skirt in the picture but other sizes and colours are available on request.This skirt is also available in a strapless dress form.