View allAll Photos Tagged Patterns,
saw this flower and just had to get a snap of it, never seen a pattern like this on a flower before. and it only appears on petal on each flower......very nice
top: Eyelet+Ribbon, Puf, Jonqal, Chillon
middle: Florz, Hurry, Cadent, Opus
bottom: Shattuck, Inapod, Msst, Paradox
I'm still 'ghosting' the WLDC themed walks. This is my optional theme. You may even say it's my dream theme. I found this peculiar space in the basement of Selfridge's department store.
I'll be away for a couple of weeks looking for Alice in a deconstructed three-dimensional chess board
For this pendant I used a convergence pattern inspired by a quilting template (by Ricky Tims) combined with an extruder cane pattern by Bettina Welker.
Für diesen Anhänger habe ich ein Quilt Muster nach Ricky Tims mit Extruder Cane-Mustern nach Bettina Welker kombiniert. Der Anhänger unten rechts war ein Versuch mit einer anderen Reihenfolge der Streifen (so la-la...).
Not sure if this is a version of Trip Around the World or not. Anybody know the name? I saw a similar one on this site a while ago and it inspired me to start one of my own. I have a long way to go on it, but I love the way it's turning out.
Kiriko, Portland, Oregon
From Kiriko's Web site:
Kiriko is a lifestyle brand forged from the spirit of Mottainai (勿体無い); a Japanese value that embraces one to waste nothing and recycle everything.
Long ago, cloth was hand-woven with patterns that held meaning and dyed with materials available through the seasons. In this way we cycled with the seasons, not trends. We made memories with our belongings instead of replace them with mass produced goods. When we began to lose touch with the tradition of making in this way, we stopped treasuring our clothes.
"We believe fabric is everything."
We are always searching Japan for vibrant Kasuri - both vintage and those made today in craft houses generations’ old, hand-dyed Shibori, and centuries old Boros. Our apparel and accessories display the incredible traditional craftsmanship and care small textile factories in Japan boast. By purchasing our products, you are not only helping Kiriko Made as a small emerging brand, but also all the factories in Japan that create the materials we are fortunate enough to use.
Wear them, love them, and hand them down.
Add another chapter to their story.
From a free pattern sheet in an old "woman's own" mag I think. Anyone who knows me well will know why these ones appealed to me!
This is seven iterations of a P3 Penrose tiling, with radial lines in red to help you see the symmetry.
More about what I'm thinking about doing with it, and how I got the idea, at domesticat.net/2010/03/penrose-quilting The entry includes vector versions you can tinker with in Inkscape or Illustrator.