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Fun pattern with two aprons, a needle case, a scarf, and coolest of all--what they call a "hose case".
No date listed and I don't have the outer envelope.
For the weekly CC competition, I had to photograph 'pattern.'
This is one of them, in mono, as I think it has more impact.
More abstracts in THIS set.
It's important to take a closer look at the natural world because patters are abundant within it. Nature is beautiful, and patterns help capture this beauty. Pattern are not only pleasing to the eye, but also *interesting,* especially in nature. I saw a few leaves on the ground, and that's where I found inspiration for my project. The leaves I saw were much more scattered than my pattern, however. I guess I wanted to add my own twist to things. It was challenging for me to figure out how to use and manipulate color with Illustrator. Eventually, I realized that making multiple layers helped me get my colors exactly where I wanted them to be. It was easy for me to draw with Illustrator -- the smoothing of lines is an AWESOME feature!
Little leaves to go on a mystery (daft) WIP I'm um...working on.
Pattern is the little hearts from Lucy at attic 24 - attic24.typepad.com/weblog/teeny-tiny-hearts.html slightly modified with slip stitches down the front of (most of) the leaves. Stupidly fast to work up, and I'm definitely returning to this pattern to make real hearts!
these dendritic patterns are the line of intersection between the ammonite's shell and its septa, which are the walls it built as it extended its shell. I've posted more information about it in our blog here:
n-e-r-v-o-u-s.com/blog/?p=1176
the fossil is approximately 110 million years old. Jesse gave it to me for the holidays.
um, yeah.
so i'm a little obsessed.
you are looking at fourteen single strands of glass seed beads, ordered into warp-and-weft patterns of color, each single bead strung after the next.
a colorful rope of glass to layer with other necklaces, a tribal adornment, simple and complex at the same time.
they are sturdy and road-worthy, something you can wear traveling through the back alleys of bangladesh, snorkeling in cuba, or skiing the swiss alps! i've worn several of these over the years, and i've found that it's easy to become attached to a particular pattern of beads, the order and abandon, the familiarity of them against your skin.
vive le bead!
White Bengal tigeress (panthera tigris tigris, tigresse blanche du Bengale) from the Amnéville Zoo near Metz in Moselle, France.
© 2013 Schneider Morgane | Setsukoh
Long shadows cross the patterned brick path.
Taken at Olbrich Botanical Gardens in Madison, Wisconsin on Saturday, November 29, 2009.
Little Robot Embroidery pattern, free for personal use.
Blogged: modjoonthefly.blogspot.com/2011/06/free-little-robot-embr...
It's Free Pattern Friday! Download our favorite free patterns from awesome indie designers on the Craftsy blog!
This is my latest haul of vintage pattern goodness. I will have to set aside some time to take pics of them all and of all the lovely illustrations inside. They are beautiful and I love them all.
Blogged here
lottielulu.blogspot.com/2007/07/une-peu-dinspiration-fran...
The trend for our little 52 photo project is for the photos to be B&W, or nearly so, at least. I thought I'd mix things up by taking a shot of something that already IS B&W, but in color!
However, that didn't look as nice as I expected. For one thing, the walls and ceiling in this room are a dark tan/terra cotta plaster. So, the bounced flash was really picking up that color - in particular in the background.
Additionally, in color, the foreground showed a lot of little splashes of various pastel nail polishes due to a horrible accident involving a bucket full of nail polish, and a small child.
The stained wood door of the bathroom STILL has splash marks!
That wasn't exactly the look I was going for, so back to B&W for me!
This is the tile floor of our bathroom - one of my favorite features in our house. Interestingly, if you were able to see the entire floor, there is one or two areas where the small black and white tiles are in the wrong place - reversed. It's like a little beauty mark for the floor!
Taken with my trusty 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 kit lens on a Nikon D60. Sb600 flash, bounced off the ceiling. Edited slightly for color (or lack of color) in GIMP.