View allAll Photos Tagged Hexagonal
I have 111 sets cut out now. I think I'm going to go with about 200 or so and then add border fabric to make the quilt bigger. I'm getting tired of cutting hexes!
- paper: the usual recycling paper (you will see the line in the back)
hexagon with 16 triangular grids (a side of hexagon is almost 15cm long)
i couldn't post any photo 'cause my photographer was on short vacation.
those who read my long profile will know what i mean ^L^".
and, of course~, i was busy to fold Parlmer's thing which will be up after these..
this one is from Roberto Gretter's honeycomb.
i thank Roberto Gretter, i mean alot. ^L^"
i dare to call the steps(6~9) on page2 of his honeycomb diagram as 'grettering' once.
('grettering' comes from Roberto 'Gretter'.. hope he doesn't mind it. ^L^")
here, i grettered twice (on each side, of course).
A smocking sampler, a few assembled hexagons and some experimenting with FM on scrim. I used a silk buttonhole twist thread in the bobbin to stitch the central FM sections. It was difficult to control the tension, but the heavier thread should provide a good base to anchor hand stitching
This is where I'm at with my hexie charm quilt...half way with the latest round of medium value fabrics.
Just started about a month ago. I have already added to this since taking the picture. It's just so hard to stop!
following attic24's pattern. I’m using Lion's Brand Baby soft yarn in colors: lt purple, dk purple, lt blue, dk blue, lt pink, yellow, green, and twinkle print multi-white.
These cake boards are used to transport heavier cakes conveniently to your guests / clients.
Quality - Masonite cake bases
Thickness – 5 mm
Colour – Silver & Gold
Shapes – Round, Square, Oval, Hexagon, Heart, Octagon shapes & Rectangle
Hexagon 1 -10 x 8.5 or 21.5cm x 25.5cm 6mm
Hexagon 2 -11 x 9.5 or 24cm x 28cm 6mm
Hexagon 3 -11.75 x 13 or 30cm x 34cm 6mm
Hexagon 4 -16 x 14 or 41cm x 35.5cm 6mm
Hexagon 5 -18 x 16 or 41cm x 46cm 6mm
Contact sweetpak-aus@hotmail.com for further details &/or purchase masonite boards and other cake packaging products.
Hexagon quilt
Made and quilted by Terri Carpenter (Moraga)
Photos taken at the Stitch Modern (EBMQG's first quilt show) at The Piedmont Center for the Arts.
More info about Stitch Modern on my blog:
www.joeysplanting.com/2012/02/01/stitch-modern-east-bay-m...
More Info about EBMQG:
My first hexagon! I like how the middle looks lacy but not too lacy. I didn't want huge holes in it that you could get a toe stuck in or something *heh*
Hexagon template handmade for saving money (^___^).
It is cut from plastic stationery holder , and punch a hole on it. If you want to try.
St James, Newton-in-the-Isle, Cambridgeshire
I left Ipswich under a clear, starlit sky on the early train, and by Bury the sun was up and shining. It was still shining at Ely, and it actually felt quite warm on my face at Downham Market where I met up with John Vigar. But by the time we got to Wisbech, barely ten minutes away, the shelf of cloud was coming in. We crossed the Nene into Cambridgeshire and headed out into the increasingly grim fen, the rain starting to spatter on the windscreen, to Newton-in-the-Isle.
I had made arrangements for the church to be open, although though ordinarily it is kept locked without a keyholder notice. We stepped out of the wind and rain into a vast, gloomy 14th Century barn of a church. The hexagonal 15th Century sandstone font was melting away. It felt like a symbol for what might well be a dying church, now only in use by its declining and elderly congregation. Despite the gloom of the nave there was an interesting and early restoration of the chancel with good 1850s glass by Heaton, Butler & Bayne, stencilled roof and the highest quality tiling. There is a dubious Hugh Easton window of the early 1930s in the north aisle.
In an antiquarian exercise, the rood loft was rebuilt in the 1890s, and is the most significant feature of the church. Iit was possible to go up - but it was very precipitous, I don't have a good head for heights, and it was much easier getting up than coming down again. The Hanoverian royal arms which previously fitted into the chancel arch are now reset above the tower arch. They are in poor condition, but it is hard to see that the parish will ever have either the money or motivation to repair them.
The church is close to its neighbours West Walton, Walpole St Peter and Leverington, but is very different in feel to those three. It is, I fear, not a church to lift the heart, if only that it feels very unused.
Outside, the wind and rain whipped across the bleak churchyard. We had met an old man in the churchyard who told us he's retired to the village from south London, and how much he loved it, but I couldn't imagine ever wanting to live in a place like this, or what effect it would have on me if I did. It was a relief to move on up through the lanes to the larger village of Tydd St Giles.
This hexagon origami ring starts with a half of a square paper. One special folding technique you will learn from this model is inserting one strip into the other.
www.origami-make.com/origami-ring-hexagon.php under www.origami-make.com/howto-origami-ring.php
Finally cut up some more fabrics and have started basting hexagons again.
Blogged: karamatdesigns.blogspot.com
from a great tutorial found on www.canoeridgecreations.com/2012/08/hexagon-coaster-tutor.... A great way to use scraps!