View allAll Photos Tagged Hexagonal
I've decided to make a scrappy hexagon quilt with my Pork Chop 5" squares! I'm grouping them into colour, 6 per group. Then I'll put the same solid in the center of each flower. I haven't decided which colour yet.
My first attempt at a flagstone! Came out alright. Made out of sugar paper with baby oil on to make it more translucent.
A swift color change happened in this one...
Berrocco pattern
Yarn: Jojoland Rhythm in M01 (borders) and M20 (middle)
Hexagon Pattern by attic24.typepad.com/weblog/hexagon-howto.html
153 Hexagons
100% cotton yarn-Sugar & Cream and Peaches & Cream
Visit my new blog at crochetattic.blogspot.com
I've joined the "Piece and Love Hexathon" group (also on Flickr) to try my hand at English Paper Piecing. I also wanted a hand piecing project for the summer when it's too hot for knitting woolie stuff. Details about this project are on my blog: stitchcat studio : stitchcatstudio.blogspot.ca/2012/05/basting-is-done.html
Video: youtu.be/JTp-Pc3hgu4
Based on a design by Dandrelin: www.flickr.com/photos/99711486@N03/10860103416/in/photost...
In Noro Kureyon. Pattern available here: itsastitchup.co.uk/knitting-patterns/cerys-hexagon-blanket/
This is probably how they will eventually be joined...after I make a whole bunch more.
My blog: sewandsox.blogspot.com
Pattern can be found here. Whipstitched together. Border is #16 from the book “Around the Corner Crochet Borders” with an extra round before the final edge.
Penfold Hexagonal Postbox seen in London. This has been added to the map, but the exact location does not appear on the map. If I remember correctly, it was taken whilst walking between London Liverpool Street Station and the Tower of London via the Monument; I think it is at Tower Hill.
I am not sure that this is an original, as I cannot read the name at the bottom, it does say Scotland and 1988 so I am presuming it is a replica.
Saturn's north polar hexagon basks in the Sun's light now that spring has come to the northern hemisphere. Many smaller storms dot the north polar region and Saturn's signature rings, which appear to disappear on account of Saturn's shadow, put in an appearance in the background. The north polar hexagon was first observed by Voyager.
The image was taken with the Cassini spacecraft's wide-angle camera on Nov. 27, 2012 using a spectral filter sensitive to wavelengths of near-infrared light centered at 750 nanometers. The view was acquired at a distance of approximately 403,000 miles (649,000 kilometers) from Saturn and at a Sun-Saturn-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 21 degrees. Image scale is 22 miles (35 kilometers) per pixel.