View allAll Photos Tagged Patterns
First pattern release for Freckled Whimsy!!!!
Interested in purchasing the pattern? Head over to my shop here --> freckledwhimsy.bigcartel.com/products
I thought it was about time a played about with making pattern. This one is from a series of quick doodlings of ladies in their lingerie
button pattern from my drawings, want to develop this further. i think there is a lot of potential for this
© Lawrence Goldman 2015 All Rights Reserved
This work is protected under international copyright laws and agreements. It cannot be reproduced, stored in retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without my prior permission.
This is the first of twenty sand patterns I photographed at Goblin Valley Park near Hanksville, Utah. It was the first one I noticed. The patterns were becoming more pronounced because of the angle of the late afternoon sun. As I continued to search, I found stranger and stranger sand patterns.
The park is best known for its fantastic erosion formations which are in the thousands within the park. However, while everyone else was looking up, I was looking down.
The patterns in the sand created by the meager rainfall, fascinated me to no end, and I spent most of the day wandering through the small washes looking for more interesting shapes and patterns...
Colette 1002, the Chantilly dress, made up in white & blue floral shirting. More construction details can be found at my blog, Idle Fancy!
A freebie from my new book, Sewing Bits & Pieces!
Snag the pattern here.
Snag the book on April 26, 2010.
A Valentine's Day photoshoot for Colette Patterns by Anja / clever nettle!
Photographer: Anja / clever nettle!
Models: Rachel and Jade
LA: Clematis vitalba
EN: Old man's beard / Traveller's joy
DE: Gewöhnliche Waldrebe
HU: Erdei iszalag / Fehérvénic
A climbing, deciduous shrub endemic to Europe. It is a climbing shrub, prefers warmer submediterranean, subatlantic regions.
The groups of seeds of a flower stay on their stalks with long hairy appendages that looks pretty attractive in autumn and winter. (See in the comment below.)