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but we're approaching the home stretch. Notice the difference in color between this image which is an older Adobe installation that I've been using for a while, and the previous image which is a new installation. Clearly I have some infernally inscrutable buried color workspace/calibration issues to hunt down.
dan had some script added to his half sleeve (in progress). i normally hate doing lettering, but this fit real good, and turned out pretty nice (thanks to my amazing sakrosankt rotary). just the background shading left now.
Hace tiempo que vi el tutorial de Page McNall por flickr, y me apetecía probarlo. Por ahora las piezas estan sin acabar, pero es una forma fácil y sencilla para hacer cuentas huecas.
Más info y fotos en mi blog
The next step is to cover the front of the wood with a dry-stacked stone wall and the top with pebbles.
As you know, I like to keep myself busy with lots of art projects. So after deciding that my list of things-to-do wasn’t long enough, I decided to embark on a new project. Here is a sneak-peek. What’s it going to be? Don’t worry, everything will be revealed by the end of the week! :)
Thanks to everyone in the Photo Restoration and Colorization Pool who has offered advice on how best to tackle this project. It's coming along fine. This is absolutenly NOT finished yet, so think of it as a work in progress.
Pattern: Arm Sling, but Toni Carr (#5 Joan of Dark) from Knockdown Knits.
Needles: US 10.5. Coming out a bit big, might have to frog and go down to a 10.
Yarn: Paton Classic Wool, one skein each of Lemongrass and Aquarium.
My mom is having shoulder surgery in late July, and after flipping through this book determined that she required a cute sling cozy for the many weeks she'll be incapacitated and stuck with an ugly arm accessory.
(We have no idea how she hurt her shoulder; it was certainly nothing as badass as roller derby. The family surmises that it was a repetitive strain injury from drinking so much coffee.)
The next step is to cover the front of the wood with a dry-stacked stone wall and the top with pebbles.
Finished knitting Andy MacDonald's hat while I was in Florida -- just in time for summer! Oh, well. There will be another winter next year, I'm told. Still need to stitch the lining down and shrink it a bit. The last version was too small, this one is too big. Wah wah.
Most of these examples are showing the system using a triangular coffer cell but the system is cell-agnostic, meaning whatever cell you want to develop you can. It's currently a hassle to change the cell because there's a lot of re-linking required when you switch things but that should be fixed soon. This system also allows for cells to be switched out at will, so a field of paracells may be comprised of one or more cell types.
An important addition to Paracell v2 is the unit spacing slider seen on the bottom left. This allows the user to effectively adjust the resolution of the cellular array in real time.
dan had some script added to his half sleeve (in progress). i normally hate doing lettering, but this fit real good, and turned out pretty nice (thanks to my amazing sakrosankt rotary). just the background shading left now.
my original acetates for the 'Crime Scene' screen print...
full info on my proofing at Artizan is at: pamglew.blogspot.com
£245 each
Available in my solo show at Fairtrade gallery
montague place, kemptown, brighton
2-25 may open fri, sat, sundays
For sales enquiries please contact
fairtradegallery@hotmail.com
A day and a half before the official unveiling, I was fortunate enough to show up at Bergdorf Goodman when the staff pulled the curtains away from the windows to scrutinize them from outside. I don't know the official title of this display yet. I'll go back to see the finished version.
A Bergdorf Goodman Christmas window display in the Carnival of the Animals series. Mural by Malcolm Hill. Passamenterie animals by Burke & Pryde Studio.
exactly that.
I have to edge everything with extra paper because i am so messy. My working conditions are not ideal - so untidy right now. I need a bigger desk/any desk at all (i am working on the top of my plan drawers)
i'm working on a zero-budget makeover of this closet into a tiny little office.
However, i can't find ANYTHING that will work for brackets for this shelf. It originally went above the clothes rod, but it's too narrow to stay up there. The lights are wound around a re-purposed curtain rod, but that rod won't support the shelf itself.
i'm looking for creative solutions/ideas for brackets - and it has to support my printer/scanner.
I've been using maxwell render for rhino which is an amazing upgrade to my workflow. Since it runs in the background as a render server and the plugin just sends files to the server to be rendered, you can keep modelling while decently-presentable images cook in the background. Keeps a much more aesthetically pleasing trace of the project's development than a set of screenshots-- that's for sure.
My first attempt at slippers!
Yay, me!
These were my Xmas gift to my father. The ivory yarn is a heavy wool, and the dark stripes are "Berella 4" in navy and burgundy. I had to hold the two colours together to equal the heaviness of the white wool.
Crocheted in back loop slip stitch, they are very stretchy and soft - like knitted ribbing.
The striped foot was worked flat and the seam is down the centre - creating the "V" pattern.
The cuff was also worked flat and sewn into a tube, then sewn to the foot.
My own design.
They fit my Dad perfectly!
:)
AT