View allAll Photos Tagged Crafting
With a Kath Kidston theme.
Ugh.. I am so sick of embrodery floss! Lol. My fingers aren't small enough for these little things!!
A big shout out to Roxanne @ Baking In Miniature for the adorable sewing bag, books, and ribbon!
Adorable craft table is from Menutmon on Etsy / Menutmon.com
A few days ago I received a copy of "Craft Inc." in the mail, sent to me from Meg Mateo Ilasco. She researched and wrote this book which is a guide for making people to turn their craft into a business. It's a great little book and I am flattered and proud to be included in it along with so many other fantastic and inspiring creators!
The lower shelves hold craft supplies. I found this CD shelving unit on the street. Love how well made it is and its thin profile for storing and displaying stuff.
A break from my 'diary' now to show you the latest on the landing craft that will be part of the D-Day Museum here. Tim was off yesterday and we popped down to check Mum's house, riding partly along the seafront on the way home. Tim couldn't ride his bike this way, but waited while I came to have a look and take some photos.
Some info from the D-Day Museum website:
LCT 7074 is a 59-metre long ‘Landing Craft, Tank’ (LCT) that carried 10 tanks to Normandy for D-Day. The tanks belonged to 7th Armoured Division and went ashore in France on 7 June 1944.
LCT 7074 is owned by the National Museum of the Royal Navy, which has received funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund to display the ship next to The D-Day Story. The ship has been brought to Southsea seafront by sea from HM Naval Base Portsmouth and will open to the public in 2020. The Sherman and Churchill tanks, which used to be on show in front of the museum, will be displayed on board the LCT.
I used my betel nut box from Thailand but any box would work. My box measures 8.5x9.5" , 8" high with the depth of the container part 2.25". I used several sizes of pharmacy bottles to create separate compartments. Now I can easily find the tool I want to use with the added benefit of being able to carry all the tools to different "clean" work spaces.
This amazing artwork is crafted on thick leather. The headpiece is of pewter or similar and there is a considerable amount of metal thread work.
It was hidden away in a B+B in Bergamo ... Antiques Roadshow material!
Finally ready to share my crafty space... or my crafty basement corner.
Blogged at: notquitevintage.typepad.com
Détails salle des machines... Details engine room...
Découverte d'une casse de péniches en Ile de France.
Les bâteaux destinés à la destruction connaissent après le déchiquetage une nouvelle vie.
Des artistes talentueux ont recouvert les carcasses avec des tags aux couleurs vives.
Cette friche industrielle offre un fabuleux décor où la nature reprend ses droits...
Discovery of a broken craft in Ile de France.
The boats destined for destruction after shredding know a new life. Talented artists have covered the carcass with these brightly colored tags.
This brownfield site offers a fabulous setting where nature comes back ...
My Craft Corner...in my bedroom,I just re-arange my room for my new hobby...yes it's sewing work .
I love to see all my doll all the time...It's very good to see them there .
The shelf from "INDEX" HOME DECORATE SHOP..and put it by my Dad.
I shot this photo of my daughter making Valentine's cards on Arista EDU 400 black and white film using my father's Pentax MX 35mm SLR.
The last surviving tank landing craft used at D-Day which avoided German shelling during the landings only to sink 66 years later in a dock on Merseyside arrived in Southsea today as part of her move to a museum.
Landfall, also known as LCT 7074, was restored at the Portsmouth Naval Base in a £4.7million project and will now go on to grace Southsea Common in Hampshire in front of the D-Day Story museum.
The 194ft (53m), 300-ton vessel was one of 800 such boats which carried tanks and military supplies on to the French beaches at Normandy as part of the Allied invasion force of June 6, 1944.
The last surviving tank landing craft used at D-Day which avoided German shelling during the landings only to sink 66 years later in a dock on Merseyside arrived in Southsea today as part of her move to a museum.
Landfall, also known as LCT 7074, was restored at the Portsmouth Naval Base in a £4.7million project and will now go on to grace Southsea Common in Hampshire in front of the D-Day Story museum.
The 194ft (53m), 300-ton vessel was one of 800 such boats which carried tanks and military supplies on to the French beaches at Normandy as part of the Allied invasion force of June 6, 1944.
But a £5million rescue operation by the Royal Navy's museum then saw her raised four years later and restored at the Portsmouth Naval Base.
... first ones to go were in the middle ... motorbike, elephants Belfast skyline ... these are all on Flickr!
This is a photo of some of my older pysanky, back when I first started. The designs are from books, but the execution is mine.