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This is a limited set of posters that are hand screen printed and watercolored. The purchase includes the black frame in the photo.
Poster Size: 11" x 17"
I drew all of the birds, created a pattern, screen printed and after watercolored each poster. Each poster is hand numbered.
(More photos on ESTY)
ETSY: www.etsy.com/listing/47264232/hand-screen-printed-and-wat...
Message me if you have any questions.
Making sure it worked before assembly. The first one I did was a 40 pin video connector. This one is the 32 pin version (early GBA) and it was much harder to work with the FunnyPlaying cable.
"I just liked the way these lighted lamps
looked thru the screened porch!"
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"In My South the back porches are
screened & the front porches have
rocking chairs."
~Robert St. John
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"Happy Wednesday, Y'all!"
~Mary Lou
This late bloomer is one of my best Dahlias this year, the reason for that is my grandkids
instead of pulling weeds they cut the tops of my 2 pink Dahlias,
You guessed it next spring I am doing the same to all my Dahlias:-)
You never to old to learn even from four year old children....
Enjoy your weekend everyone.
After seeing so many Lothian LED screen changes I was relieved to see a bus that the screen wouldn't play up on. Here we see Digital Screen 768 on a service 8 to the Royal Infirmary.
Printing process shot. This print was inspired by Sol LeWitts long instructional titles where its up to the draftsperson to determine line orientation. Nov. 2007
Artist's screen hiding building renovation works - using a deformed image of a Haussmanian building; avenue George V, Paris, August 07
HONOLULU - JUNE 29, 2016: WWE Live logo on screen at WWE event at the Neal S. Blaisdell Center, Honolulu on June 29, 2016 Honolulu, Hawaii.
All Saints, Thurlton, Norfolk
A trim little church in one of the largest of the marsh villages east of Loddon. The 15th Century screen has lost its panels but the original decorative paintwork is exquisite.
This restaurant was showing menu items on an illuminated screen. Mostly it was working well but I caught it between images.
The Saturday Self-challenge group has chosen Backlight today,
Deryn and I had a late flight so needed to kill a few hours in the morning. We walked up from Dulwich and entered what must be one of the strangest museums. The Horniman houses an eclectic collection of objects with no real theme holding them together. Preserved bugs and butterflies are within reach of voodoo shrines, musical instruments and Hindu and Buddhist figurines. The history of how the museum came into being, below, perhaps explains this mix.
Still it’s much loved and attracts attendees and during our visit hundreds of tiny kids lining up for the dinosaur exhibition. It also proved a rich seam for amateur photographers! As my photography collection too lacks a theme I had no restrictions in capturing some of these treasures.
“Frederick John Horniman, Victorian tea trader and philanthropist, began collecting objects, specimens and artefacts 'illustrating natural history and the arts and handicrafts of various peoples of the world' from around 1860. His overarching mission was to 'bring the world to Forest Hill' and educate and enrich the lives of the local community.
His travels took him to far flung destinations such as Egypt, Sri Lanka, Burma, China, Japan, Canada and the United States collecting objects which 'either appealed to his own fancy or that seemed to him likely to interest and inform those who had not had the opportunity to visit distant lands'. Mr Horniman’s interest as a collector was well known and many travellers approached him with specimens and curiosities.
By the late nineteenth century, these 'natural, industrial and artistic spoils had accumulated to such an extent that he gave up the whole house to the collections'.
His wife is reported to have said 'either the collection goes or we do'. With that, the family moved to Surrey Mount.”