View allAll Photos Tagged Patterns
Vintage girls dress patterns from the 1940s. Notice buttons instead of zippers and lots of pleating. Feb. 2015.
Putty Beach
All rights are reserved. Please contact me if you are interested in using this image. Thanks for looking at my work
Feel free to visit my website 4G Images
It is a small commercial site offering high quality prints
It's Free Pattern Friday! Visit the Craftsy Blog for our weekly roundup of free patterns, including quilting, knitting, crochet, embroidery and more!
A lot of interesting patterns to discover in a tropical forest.
Dive with me at Amontillado on the Philippine island of Negros and check out my blog!
All rights reserved. Please do not use or reproduce this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my permission.
Webb Telescope: supernova discovery machine!
Webb has identified 10 times more supernovae in the early universe than previously known. Several are the most distant examples of their type, including those used to measure the universe's expansion rate.
As the universe expands, light gets stretched into longer (infrared) wavelengths over time. This is called redshift! Because their light has been traveling such great distances, and for so long, Webb’s powerful and sensitive infrared eye is ideal for observing far-off supernovae.
Before Webb, only a handful of supernovae above a redshift of 2 (corresponding to when the universe was 3.3 billion years old) had been found. Now Webb’s data sample includes dying stars that exploded when the universe was less than 2 billion years old, in its pre-teens. Learn more:
science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-opens-new-windo...
This image: The JADES Deep Field uses observations taken by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) as part of the JADES (JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey) program. A team of astronomers studying JADES data identified about 80 objects (circled in green) that changed in brightness over time. Most of these objects, known as transients, are the result of exploding stars or supernovae. Prior to this survey, only a handful of supernovae had been found above a redshift of 2, which corresponds to when the universe was only 3.3 billion years old — just 25% of its current age. The JADES sample contains many supernovae that exploded even further in the past, when the universe was less than 2 billion years old. It includes the farthest one ever spectroscopically confirmed, at a redshift of 3.6. Its progenitor star exploded when the universe was only 1.8 billion years old. |
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, JADES Collaboration
Image description: Space telescope image showing hundreds of objects of different colors, shapes, and sizes scattered across the black background of space. There are small red blobs; larger, fuzzy white or blueish ball-shaped masses with bright centers; white, pink, or blue disc shapes; clear spiral structures; and barely discernible specs. Eighty-three of the smaller objects in the image are circled in green. Some of the circles are close together; some are far apart; some overlap. There is no apparent pattern in the distribution.
Detail crop from the Transamerica Pyramid skyscraper in San Francisco. Hand held shot from the corner of Montgomery Street and Montague Pl.
I like this shot because of the repeating pattern the windows make, though with small variations once you look more closely.
I didn't realize that I had dropped off the face of the Earth and the face of Flickr for nearly three weeks until my daughter sent me an email last night telling me that I've been slacking! Apparently she is right!
So, today I will share with you this little goody that I made to send along with a swap package that I am doing on a quilting forum. My secret pal collects dragons, so I purchased this cute pattern on Etsy from DIY Fluffies - www.etsy.com/people/DIYFluffies?ref=ls_profile
I gave him a staff made from a long sewing needle adorned with beads and a thimble in his other hand, and a necklace made of vintage buttons. He is on his way right now to someone in Virginia.
Tonight I will be taking a class in machine quilting with a friend, so I haven't been totally lazy! Just working on some other things!
This is some kind of Star stitch variation that I found in Weldon's Practical Crochet.
It's the only Star st pattern I've found in over 150 sources that uses true spike sts (crocheting into a row below the working row).
The spike "spoke" obscures the eye of the star, but it's there.
I'm not confident that I did this pattern right. It's not clear to me where exactly to work the spike, for example. The illustration looks a bit different (it does pretty much match this swatch if it were turned on its side.)
This is sport wt (DesigningVashti Lotus yarn) and a 4.5 mm crochet hook.
Blackwork fillings from the same 16th century long cover in the V & A. Bigger patterns are used for the larger leaves. This sample is approximately 8 x 13 cm.
By Sherrie Thai of ShaireProductions. Feel free to download and use these as a background for commercial or noncommercial projects. If you decide to use them, please let me know how it goes by sending a link or an image. Enjoy!
just simple pattern of life against lifeless ruined wall of the fort.
see few others with some form of patterns @ www.flickr.com/search/?q=pattern+OR+patterns&w=431094...