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This project will end here, for now. Life got in the way, and I might have bitten more than I could chew, so that´s that. Can´t do it all, and I understand that sadly, photography can not be my priority at this time.

 

I will still take photos, and I will still upload them. Not as often and not in the "365 days" format.

 

Si hablas español aquí puedes leer más sobre ello: unalmafeliz.wordpress.com/2014/04/12/100365-el-finalpor-a...

Heidelberg, Detroit

Finalul si apogeul unui proiect inceput la sfarsitul lui februarie 2010. Tentativa fotografica, nascuta din cea mai sincera interactiune cu un director de Biblioteca.

 

Project Quilting- Week 4- Barn Quilts

 

26x26

 

Seattle, WA

 

I was drawn to the traditional quilt patterns in the Barn Quilts, so I decided to go with a traditional pattern from the book Color and Quilt. I also added some hand dyed fabric for the circle pieces.

 

I started with a red center circle, but after it was all done, it was decided by my husbnad nad I and that red just didn't work, so I changed it to the green middle.

 

I also used extras from the front fabrics to design the back!

 

I blogged about it in more detail here.

Engineering students were testing out their final projects on B street

St. Giles Church - Cathedral

 

John Knox a statue in memory.

 

John Knox

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Calvinism

John Calvin

 

Background

Christianity

St. Augustine

The Reformation

 

Distinctives

Calvin's Institutes

Five Solas

Five Points (TULIP)

Regulative principle

Confessions of faith

 

Influences

Theodore Beza

Synod of Dort

Puritan theology

Jonathan Edwards

Princeton theologians

Karl Barth

 

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This box: view • talk • edit

 

For other people named John Knox, see John Knox (disambiguation).

 

John Knox (1514?–1572) was a Scottish religious reformer who took the lead in reforming the Church in Scotland along Calvinist lines. He is widely regarded as the father of the Protestant Reformation in Scotland and of the Church of Scotland. He died in Edinburgh on November 24, 1572.

Contents

[hide]

 

* 1 Early life

* 2 Conversion to Protestantism

* 3 Confinement in the French galleys

* 4 Residence in England

* 5 Europe and Geneva, 1554-1559

* 6 Organization of the Church in Scotland

* 7 Knox and Queen Mary

* 8 Ministry in Edinburgh and private life

* 9 Personal appearance and manner

* 10 Testimonies to his character

* 11 See also

* 12 References

* 13 External links

 

[edit] Early life

John Knox

Enlarge

John Knox

 

Many of the details of Knox's early life are unclear. His place of birth is not known for certain, though Giffordgate, a suburb of the burgh of Haddington, East Lothian (16 miles/26 km east of Edinburgh), is the generally accepted location. He may have been born in either 1513 or 1514, though some sources favour 1505.

 

His father, William Knox of Haddingtonshire, had fought at the Battle of Flodden. His mother's maiden name was Sinclair. The young Knox received his education via the Scottish Church, which was regarded as "liberal" compared with the pre-reformation Catholic standards of the day.

 

The uncertainty about Knox's early life is such that it is not even known at which university he studied, since the dates and time he spent at college are uncertain. He certainly studied under the celebrated John Mair (or John Major), a native, like Knox, of East Lothian and one of the greatest scholars of his time. Mair was at the University of Glasgow in 1522 and at St. Andrews in 1531. The name "John Knox" is listed amongst Glasgow's incorporati in 1522, though it is also claimed that Knox went to St. Andrews.

 

Knox did not shine as an outstanding scholar when compared with contemporaries such as George Buchanan and Alesius. Indeed, there is no evidence that he even graduated. He did, however, know Latin well, and was familiar with the works of classical writers, such as Saint Augustine and Saint Jerome. From his writing it is clear that Knox learned the Greek and Hebrew languages after ending his formal studies.

 

Knox is first mentioned as a priest in 1540, and in 1543 he was still an ordained Catholic clergyman. A notarial instrument dated 27 March 1543 and signed by him in his capacity as a priest is still in existence, and is kept in the charter-room at Tyninghame Castle.

 

Up to this time, however, he seems to have employed himself in private tuition, rather than in parochial duties. At the moment when he last signed his name as a priest, he was probably already engaged in the office (which he held for several years) of tutor in the family of Hugh Douglas of Longniddry, in East Lothian. He was also responsible for the education of the son of a neighbour, John Cockburn of Ormiston. Both of these lairds, like Knox himself, had an interest in new religious ideas sweeping Europe at this time.

 

[edit] Conversion to Protestantism

 

Knox first publicly professed the Protestant faith about the end of 1545, though it is thought that his beliefs had been moving in that direction for some time. According to Calderwood, it was Thomas Guillaume, a fellow native of East Lothian, who was the first "to give Mr. Knox a taste of the truth." Guillaume was originally a member of the order of Blackfriars, and had been chaplain to James Hamilton, 2nd Earl of Arran, Regent of Scotland, for a short time in 1543.

George Wishart

Enlarge

George Wishart

 

However, it is thought that the Knox's actual conversion was probably the result of his friendship with George Wishart. Wishart, who had returned to Scotland in 1544 after a period of banishment, had preached in favour of the reformation. Knox became one of Wishart's closest associates, and he followed him everywhere. He acted as Wishart's body-guard, bearing, it is said, a two-edged sword in order to defend Wishart against supporters of Cardinal David Beaton, leader of the anti-Protestant movement within the Scottish church.

 

In December 1545, Wishart was seized on Beaton's orders, and transferred to Edinburgh Castle on 19 January 1546. Knox was present on the night of Wishart's arrest, and was prepared to follow him into captivity, and consequently, in all probability death. Wishart persuaded him against this course however, saying:

 

Nay, return to your bairns [children]. One is sufficient for a sacrifice.

 

Wishart was subsequently tried for heresy and burnt at the stake in St Andrews in March 1546. Knox went on to become a Protestant minister in St Andrews, a place with which he had strong links throughout his life. It does not appear that he was ever officially ordained, though he was already a priest in the Catholic Church. An account of the proceedings connected with his call to the ministry, together with a report of the first sermon he delivered in St. Andrews, is found in his book, History of the Reformation.

 

[edit] Confinement in the French galleys

 

After Beaton's death, the castle at St. Andrews became a place of refuge for many Scottish Protestants, and Knox resided there in relative peace along with his pupils, the sons of Longniddry and Ormiston, for several months. At the end of July 1547, however, the castle was attacked and captured by pro-Catholic French forces. Knox and some of the rest of the refugees were taken prisoner, and forced to row in the French galleys.

 

He spent eighteen months as a galley-slave, amid hardships and miseries which are said to have permanently injured his health:

 

How long I continued prisoner [and] what torments I sustained in the galleys, and what were the sobs of my heart, is now no time to recite.

 

He never gave up hope of returning to Scotland and indeed was confident that he would eventually do so. In his History he gave testimony to this fact by mentioning how, during the second visit of the galley to Scotland, he was asked by James Balfour (a fellow prisoner) whether he knew where he was. Knox, who at the time was so sick that few hoped for his life, replied:

 

Yea, I know it well; for I see the steeple of that place where God first in public opened my mouth to glory; and I am fully persuaded, how weak soever I now appear, that I shall not depart this life, till that my tongue shall glorify his godly name in the same place.

 

The French made attempts to have Knox renounce his Protestant beliefs and on one occasion asked him to kiss the feet of an image of the Virgin Mary. He threw it into the sea, saying "let our lady now save herself; for she is light enough; let her learn to swim".

 

[edit] Residence in England

 

On his release early in 1549 through the apparent intervention of the English government, Knox found that he could be of little use in Scotland in its existing state. Like many of his countrymen in that troubled time, he therefore submitted to voluntary exile, continuing in his absence to devote himself to ministerial labours in connection with the Reformed Church, while for the first five years he worked as a minister of the English Church.

 

During the reign of Edward VI, the Church of England was in a transitional state; some of its most marked peculiarities (to which Knox himself and others in Scotland and abroad afterwards objected) were then in abeyance, or at least not insisted upon. For example, the use of the prayer-book was not enforced, and neither was kneeling at the communion. Episcopal government was of course acknowledged; but Knox held his commission, as a reformed preacher, directly from the privy council, and was virtually independent of diocesan jurisdiction. He seems to have had no strong objection to episcopacy itself, although he disapproved of "your proud prelates' great dominions and charge, impossible by one man to be discharged"; on this and other grounds he declined the bishopric of Rochester in 1552.

 

The offices he held in the Church of England are briefly indicated in the History, which says, "He was first appointed preacher to Berwick, then to Newcastle; and last he was called to London and to the southern parts of England, where he remained till the death of King Edward VI of England" (Works,i., p. 280).

 

From other sources it appears that in 1551 he was appointed one of the six chaplains in ordinary to the king. In this capacity he joined the other chaplains in sanctioning, after revision,The Articles concerning an Uniformity in Religion of 1552, which became the basis of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England.

 

[edit] Europe and Geneva, 1554-1559

 

From England, after the death of Edward, Knox proceeded to the continent, travelling for a time from place to place in some uncertainty. In September 1554, while living at Geneva, he accepted with Calvin's advice a call from the English Church at Frankfurt. Here controversies in connection with vestments, ceremonies, and the use of the English prayer-book awaited him and led in March 1555 to his resignation (cf. his treatise, A Brief Narrative of the Troubles which Arose at Frankfurt, reprinted in Laing's edition of his works). He returned to Geneva, where he was invited to become minister of the refugee English congregation. In August, however, he was induced to set out for Scotland, where he remained for nine months preaching evangelical doctrine in various parts of the country, persuading those who favoured the Reformation to cease attending mass and join him in celebrating the Lord's Supper according to a reformed ritual.

 

In May, 1556, he was cited to appear before the hierarchy in Edinburgh, and he boldly responded to the summons; but the bishops found it expedient not to proceed with the trial. In July an urgent call from his congregation at Geneva, probably combined with his desire to avoid persecution in Scotland, caused him to resume his Genevan ministry. His marriage to Marjorie Bowes, daughter of Richard Bowes, captain of Norham Castle, had meanwhile taken place, and his wife and mother-in-law joined him in Geneva.

 

The church in which he preached there (called the Église de Notre Dame la Neuve) had been granted, at Calvin's solicitation, for the use of the English and Italian congregations by the municipal authorities. Knox's life in Geneva was no idle one. To preaching and clerical work of an exacting kind he added a large correspondence; and he was constantly engaged in literary work, for example his long and elaborate treatise on predestination (published 1560). His output at Geneva included his First Blast against the Monstrous Regiment of Women, published in 1558, in which he unleashed a torrent of vitriol against female rulers:

 

For who can denie but it is repugneth to nature, that the blind shall be appointed to leade and conduct such as do see? That the weake, the sicke and impotent persons shall norishe and kepe the hole and strong? And finallie, that the foolishe, madde and phrenetike shal governe the discrete and give counsel to such as be sober of mind. And such be al women, compared unto man in bearing of authoritie. For their sight in civile regiment is but blindness; their strength, weaknes; their counsel, foolishnes; and judgment, phrensie, if it be rightlie considered.

 

With the exception of some months spent in Dieppe, France (1557-58), when he was contemplating a return to Scotland, he continued to officiate in Geneva, while remaining deeply interested in his native land and in constant communication with the reform party there, till January 1559, when he finally left for home.

 

[edit] Organization of the Church in Scotland

 

He arrived in Edinburgh May 2, 1559. The time was a critical one. During his absence the reform party had become more numerous, more self-reliant and aggressive, and better consolidated. The queen dowager, Mary of Guise, acting as regent for her daughter, the young Mary I of Scotland, then in France, had become keener to crush the Protestants and determined to use force. Civil war was imminent, but each side shrank from the first step. Knox at once became the leader of the reformers. He preached against "idolatry" with the greatest boldness, with the result that what he called the "rascal multitude" began the "purging" of churches and the destruction of monasteries. Politics and religion were closely intertwined; the reformers were struggling to keep Scotland free from the yoke of France and did not hesitate to seek the help of England.

 

Knox negotiated with the English government to secure its support, and he approved of the declaration by the lords of his party in October 1559 suspending their allegiance to the regent. The death of the latter in June 1560 opened the way to a cessation of hostilities and an agreement to leave the settlement of ecclesiastical questions to the Scottish estates. The doctrine, worship, and government of the Roman Church were overthrown by the parliament of 1560 and Protestantism established as the national religion. Knox, assisted by five other ministers, formulated the confession of faith adopted at this time and drew up the constitution of the new Church: the First Book of Discipline.

 

The Church—or Kirk—was organised on something approaching Presbyterian lines. Priests were replaced by ministers (from the Latin for servants), with each parish governed by the Kirk Session of elders; but at this time the proposed replacement of bishops with "superintendents" was only partly implemented.

 

[edit] Knox and Queen Mary

John Knox admonishing Mary Queen of Scots. Stained glass window in Covenant Presbyterian Church, Long Beach, California, USA.

Enlarge

John Knox admonishing Mary Queen of Scots. Stained glass window in Covenant Presbyterian Church, Long Beach, California, USA.

 

Queen Mary returned to Scotland in August 1561 thoroughly predisposed against Knox, while he and the other reformers looked upon her with anxiety and suspicion. Fundamental differences of character and training made a keen encounter between the two inevitable. Five personal interviews between Knox and the queen are recorded, each at Mary's invitation.

 

Some historians have criticised Knox's behaviour towards Mary: for example Schaff portrays Knox as having an "unyielding and repelling" attitude towards the queen and claims that he was "harsh and uncourtierlike" with her[1]. Others, such as Mackenzie, deny this and point out Knox's experience in courts during his chaplaincy for Edward VI. Mackenzie even claims Queen Mary as an unlikely character witness for Knox:

 

The last time he stood in her presence, Knox put it to her if he had ever spoken an offensive word in any one of their interviews. The Queen, thus appealed to, could not, and did not say that he ever had. (Mackenzie 1888:352)

 

When Mary summoned Knox after he had preached against her proposed marriage to Don Carlos, son of Philip II of Spain, he reduced her to tears. She demanded, "What have ye to do with my marriage?" and when he proceeded to justify himself, she broke down and "howled". After she had dried her eyes, Knox told her that he had never much liked weeping and could hardly abide the tears of his own boys when he beat them. He explained to her that she had "no just occasion to be offended" because he was only speaking the truth (Guy 2004:176).

 

In an earlier interview, Knox had told Mary that he was "as well content to live under your Grace as St Paul was to live under Nero". Knox's theories about women rulers reveal him as a misogynist and a prude. The reason women were not fit to rule, according to him, was that they were "idolatresses" who set reason aside and ruled by their emotions. This view of female psychology made Knox not only offensive to Mary but dangerous. It fed his political theory, set out in "The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women", that it was legitimate for the people to overthrow and even execute female rulers because of precedents in the Bible, for example the cases of Jezebel and Athalia, in which female rulers were overthrown to the obvious benefit of the state.

 

Mary moved against Knox by having him arrested and put on trial after he summoned a "convocation of the brethren", in terms that could be interpreted as incitement to violence, to free two Calvinists who had threatened one of the royal priests. He was charged with conspiracy "to raise a tumult" against the queen, but he led his own defence and was acquitted.

 

[edit] Ministry in Edinburgh and private life

 

When the reformed religion was formally ratified by law in Scotland in 1560, Knox was appointed minister of the Church of St.Giles, then the great parish church of Edinburgh. He was at this time at the height of his powers, as is manifest in the style of his History of the Reformation—a work which he appears to have begun in about 1559 and completed over the next six or seven years.

 

At the very beginning of his labours as minister of Edinburgh, he had the misfortune to lose his much-loved young wife. She left two sons, one of whom, Nathanael, died at Cambridge in 1580; the other, Eleazer, became vicar of Clacton Magna in the archdeaconry of Colchester and died in 1591. In 1564 Knox made a second marriage, which was greatly talked of at the time, not only because the bride was distantly related to the royal family but because she was seventeen and Knox three times older. The young lady was Margaret Stewart, daughter of Andrew, Lord Stewart of Ochiltree. She bore Knox three daughters, of whom the youngest, Elizabeth, became the wife of the famous John Welsh, minister of Ayr.

 

At this time the reformer lived a very busy life. As well as being devoted to his work as a parish minister, he was much engrossed with the public affairs of the national Church and embroiled in continual controversies with the ecclesiastical and political factions of the day. He was, however, not without social and family enjoyments. A fair stipend of four hundred marks Scots, equal to about forty-four pounds of English money of that day, enabled him to afford hospitality and to advance money to a friend in need. He had a good house, which was provided and kept in repair by the municipality.

 

During the greater part of his ministry in Edinburgh he lived in a house on a site now occupied by the City Council Chambers. Another house in Edinburgh, still preserved with little change and known since the eighteenth century at the latest as "John Knox's house," may have been occupied by him toward the close of his life. With all his severity, there must have been much sympathy in a man who was repeatedly invited to reconcile the sundered, husband with wife, friend with friend. He lived on good terms with his neighbors, many of whom became his intimate friends. His writings reveal, along with other aspects of his personality, a lively sense of humour.

 

[edit] Personal appearance and manner

 

A description of Knox's appearance in his later years and of his style as a preacher is furnished in the Diary of James Melville. Melville, who was a student in 1571 at St. Andrews when Knox, not for the first time in his life, had taken refuge in the city for his personal security, wrote:

 

Mr. Knox would sometimes come in, and repose him in our college-yard, and call us scholars unto him, and bless us, and exhort us to know God and his work in our country, and stand by the good cause; to use our time well, and learn the good instructions, and follow the good example, of our masters... He was very weak. I saw him every day of his doctrine go hulie and fear [slowly and warily], with a furring of martriks about his neck, a staff in the one hand, and good godly Richard Ballantyne, his servant, holding up the other oxter [arm-pit], from the abbey to the parish church; and by the said Richard and another servant lifted up to the pulpit, where he behoved to lean at his first entry; but ere he had done with his sermon, he was so active and vigorous that he was like to ding that pulpit in blads and flee out of it. (Melville 1829)

 

A Latin epistle sent by Sir Peter Young to Theodore Beza in 1579 contains another description of the reformer's personal appearance in his later years. His stature was "a little under middle height"; his "limbs were graceful"; his head "of moderate size"; his face "longish"; his nose "beyond the average length"; his forehead "rather narrow"; his brows "standing out like a ridge"; his cheeks "somewhat full" as well as "ruddy"; his mouth "large"; his "complexion darkish"; his eyes dark blue (or bluish grey) and his glance "keen"; his beard "black, with white hairs intermingled" and a "span and a half long." In his countenance, which was "grave and severe," "a certain graciousness was united with natural dignity and majesty."

 

[edit] Testimonies to his character

 

Knox's wife nursed him devotedly during his last illness, during which many important people visited his bedside. Knox's servant, Richard Ballantyne, after detailing the incidents of his last hours, says of him:

 

Of this manner departit this man of God, the lycht of Scotland, the comfort of the Kirke within the same, the mirrour of Godliness, and patrone and example to all trew ministeris, in puritie of lyfe, soundness in doctrine, and in bauldness in reproving of wicketness, and one that caired not the favore of men (how great soever they were) to reprove thair abuses and synes.

 

A testimony to Knox was pronounced at his grave in the churchyard of St. Giles by the Earl of Mortoun, the regent of Scotland, in the presence of a large crowd of mourners, who had followed the body to its last resting-place:

 

Here lyeth a man who in his life never feared the face of man, who hath been often threatened with dagge and dagger, but yet hath ended his dayes in peace and honour.

 

John Knox's gravesite at the Church of St Giles has (along with various other graves) been covered over by a car park for the adjacent Parliament Hall. He is buried under parking bay number 23.

This is a continuation of the current project of an Image a day.

This will take a year to complete. It will be a "Colour Project"....numbered 731 to 1100 and it will begin on September 1st 2022..

I will also include an additional 4 Sets that will last a month each.

First will be Vines and Vineyards in November.2022.

Second is Forests ,,Water, ,Trees and Leaves in February 2023.

Third "Light Eating Objects" in May 2023.

Forth will be another B&W . August 2023.

On top of all that every month will feature a small set of 4 pics with different themes.

As you can see I shall be a busy Bunny!.

Hope you like the stuff!!!!!!!.

We have lived in this neighborhood since May 2010. It borders a tidal creek and there is a golf course. It's such a treat to walk the cart path on holes 17 & 18 as the marsh borders these holes.

 

Every day brings something wonderful to see and experience.

 

Please walk with us. I want to show you my favorite sights. I want to show you the things that fill me with wonder - it's like being a child all over again for me.

 

Nature. There is nothing like it!

1968 Cougar Project - From Grandma Green to slick two tone custom paint. Follow along as we update this Cougar.

 

www.CleanCutCreations.com

Kids help me making pizza and movie night in their pop up tent.

Model Nicky

thanks to: Lavender, Meo Bong, Halo

Đêm wa up 1 tấm nhưng mà thấy chưa đạt thành ra sáng nay lại lồm cồm ngồi tút lại. các pác góp ý nhé

Cameron Glee Project at the world premiere of the Glee: 3D Concert Movie

This project was a 130m Long Building in Ljubljana containing 100 apartments and some offices. It has somewhat of a retro style because the city itself kind of demanded it. Created with Sketchup, Vray and Photoshop.

 

More info, Renders, Models and Concept Art on my website: www.renderstorm.fr

The latest offering from the R&D sheds of B.A.S.T.A.R.D behind dry dock 4. An ultra high speed, high altitude attack or reconnaisance prototype namd "Spectre"

Inspired by Tromas's recent WIP, in turn based on the Macross VF fighters

See comments on Floor Plan photo

Project 365 09/04/2017: Yellow cake topped with strawberries and sweet frosting.

   

I have to say that i felt good about this when i was done and saw it first but everyone made me feel awful about it. Oh well it has meaning to me and i guess that's what matters. but still, i wish i could change my project now..

 

well irl people can just ruin things..

 

It was a wet one in Barrie yesterday, lots of rain and fog but I'm glad to report the snow is back to covering everything today ;-) As it's getting warmer out the birds aren't coming to the feeders as often ;-(

 

Count Results : Red-breasted Nuthatch (2), Downy Woodpecker (2), BC Chickadee (1), Am Goldfinch (1), Mourning Dove (1)

 

Check out our new Project, Nature 10+1 (Decade long 365!!) at pwtphotography.com.

 

Member of the Flickr Bird Brigade

The Tutu Project, raises awareness and raises funds for those affected by Breast cancer. www.thetutuproject.com

this is a really slowly evolving project.

it started in february when dassa and papyraceous came up with the framed twists which were first done by melisande. I immediately loved this design, especially the backlit view with all those curved lines.

dassa invited people to join in folding those. I said I would.

and I tried. it took me some time to understand the idea, even though papyraceous had told how to do it. the concept is really cool: you fold square twists and then you treat the resulting paper like a new, unused grid and fold open-back square twists which provide the frames.

those big open-back twists presented the next problem. you need some etxra lines that are only slightly off-set to the grid and also quite long. I found it very hard to precrease them properly. which frustrated me so much that I let the project come to a hiatus. the orange piece had had it's first set of twists done in february and has only been completed yesterday.

as you can see I dug out the idea again on the weekend and test-elated it on bigger paper. I used an emboss needle to precrease the lines that gave me such trouble. this works quite well.

now there are two issues I still want to work on. first I want a dark border around the whole model, that should be easy to do. second I want more twists which means a bigger grid. I'll probably do it from tant. soon, I think...

 

and now it is your turn to fold this, too! after all, it is a gorgeous design ; )

Sometimes at the beginning of a new year I have so many things clamoring for my attention that I find it difficult to focus...inevitably though, one of those things becomes crystal clear...and I move forward...

 

After I watched him up close and personal, he flew off with his vole with some difficulty and landed about 30 feet away. Here is this little beauty with his catch.

day 34 of A's beard-growing project

-> July 11th 3PM slt to 25th

New Nose chain

- Version 1: 175 copies

Color Black,Metal,Copper,White,Or

- Version 2: 175 copies

Color Teal,Pink,Marine,Purple,Red

 

Taxi: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Metropolis/147/146/23

  

Body image refer to our perception, thoughts, feeling and reaction to our looks.

Each person holds an idealized image of the body, which he uses to measure the percepts and concepts of his or her own body.

The loss of a limb by amputation could lead to a long-term disorder in the individual’s body experience.

 

The project deals with a series of prosthetic arms each refer to a specific body image of amputees.

 

Technique - super sclpey

 

*School of Visual Arts, NY.

Course instructor - Allan Chochinov

More details on this project available here.

The Lowbrow Tarot Project

www.lowbrowtarot.com

 

Lowbrow Tarot Collectors Book & Deck:

auniakahn.bigcartel.com/product/lowbrow-tarot-book-deck

 

The Lowbrow Tarot Project showcased 23 amazing artists who used their creative genius and unique style to take on the 22 Major Arcana [+ the card back] and create 23 new works of art in the rugged glow of the lowbrow art movement that was displayed in an exhibition at La Luz de Jesus on October 1, 2010. With the completion of this project, we celebrate the 2 year anniversary with the release of the Lowbrow Tarot Book & Deck.

 

The books and deck features 23 new and original works, while the book has been expand to showcase 314 color & black/white works by renowned and accomplished artists: Carrie Ann Baade, Christopher Ulrich, Edith Lebeau, Cate Rangel, Kris Kuksi, Chris Mars, Christopher Umana, Chris Conn, Brian M. Viveros, Claudia Drake, Heather Watts, Molly Crabapple, David Stoupakis, Laurie Lipton, Patrick “Star 27” Deignan, Chet Zar, Jessica Joslin, Danni Shinya Luo, Jennybird Alcantara, Angie Mason, Scott G. Brooks, Aunia Kahn and Daniel Martin Diaz.

 

Project 365, Day 32. First semester, done! Today was a really chill day. Chem midterm was decent and I had a really easy swim practice.

 

Well here is a picture of my friend. This is the first time I used a preset in Lightroom and it came out decently.

Mayo 26 de 2017

Presentación: Décimo

Project 365 day 5 10/12/10

Gummy bears on my car's wheel.

Yes. I'm bored inside my car waiting for my wife...

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