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Love the detail on this butterfly print :)

Stack of iPods from my current collection.

the cds in the foreground.

The tightly packed, small scale prints make stacks that really do look like Kaleidoscope images :)

South Stack is famous as the location of one of Wales' most spectacular lighthouses, South Stack Lighthouse. It has a height of 41 metres (135 feet). It has a maximum area of 7 acres.

 

Until 1828 when an iron suspension bridge was built, the only means of crossing the deep water channel on to the island was in a basket which was suspended on a hemp cable. The suspension bridge was replaced in 1964, but by 1983 the bridge had to be closed to the public, due to safety reasons. A new aluminium bridge was built and the lighthouse was reopened for public visits in 1997. Thousands of people flock to the lighthouse every year, thanks to the continued public transport service from Holyhead's town centre.

 

There are over 400 stone steps down to the footbridge (and not, as local legend suggests, 365), and the descent and ascent provide an opportunity to see some of the 4,000 nesting birds that line the cliffs during the breeding season. The cliffs are part of the RSPB South Stack Cliffs bird reserve, based at Elin's Tower.

 

The Anglesey Coastal Path passes South Stack, as does the Cybi Circular Walk. The latter has long and short variants; the short walk is 4 miles long and takes around two hours to complete. Travelling from the Breakwater Country Park, other sites along the way are the North Stack Fog Signal station, Caer y Tŵr, Holyhead Mountain and Tŷ Mawr Hut Circles.

Two UP Stack trains meet in Traver, CA. This is a small town of about 700 people along the SR-99 "valley" corridor of the Central Valley of California. Traver is known for its grain exports.

 

Today these two stack trains waste no time blazing through town, even with an older Southern Pacific (now UP) loco second out on the Westbound (Compass North) train.

 

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We Tell Ourselves Stories in Order to Live, Winnie The Pooh, Interpreter of Maladies, Water for Elephants, Einstein: His Life and Universe, The Castle in the Forest, Palm Sunday, No One Belongs Here More Than You, The Audacity of Hope, What is the What, Lincoln, George and Sam

Stacks keep me interested because, even though I have a general idea of what a stack will look like, there are always elements of the finished block that surprise me. On top are three eight-stacks of diamonds and below them are the blocks they made. These are cut from a 2.5 inch strip, so when the seam allowances are taken, the finished block looks quite different from the stack set.

For stacking, I tear my fabric instead of cutting for the stacking part because I want to work with the grain line. The first tear is along the center fold of the fabric and then I work with the two sides separately. I never combine repeats from the first side of the fabric with ones from the second side and this picture is a good example of why. The first side of the fabric had the motifs in a straight line with the grain, but on this second side you can see how much they're off. This happens sometimes even on the best of fabrics. While this wouldn't be good for many things, it's actually good for stacking because it assures that blocks made from the second side will be different from those made from the first side. I cut with the grain, so you can see how different the cuts will be from one end of the fabric to the other.

Stacked books, polymer clay pendant. It is just over 1 inch (3 cm) tall.

I usually make much bigger stuff but I love these little books. They make me smile.

The 1940 photograph illustrates physical nature of building a wheat stack. The men carrying the bag were known as lumpers and were skilled in balancing the weight of the bag and placing it in position to build a stable stack.

Stacks on Norfolk Southern train 20R stream eastbound past Macungie PA.

A few images from a recent visit to Stack Rock fort. It is testament to the skill of the engineers and builders of the day that the main structure is still in such good condition.

An old tessellation, reworked with elephant hide. It looks a little better this way, I think.

It's springtime. Colours everywhere.

Stack of oversize books, including two atlases of the imaginary! Plus a large, vintage atlas (bottom of stack), a hardback copy produced in the early 1990s of George Stubb's Horse Anatomy (I so snatched this one up when I found it!) and a book detailing heritage trees of the Great State of Texas.

 

Used book finds, Fall 2011.

A Westbound stack train with BNSF power holds at the interlocking, lots of reefers on the first block of cars...the clip-on gen-sets are converted from A-Line trailer reefer units by shortening them.

Each member of the marching band gets some spending money on bowl trips. EACH MEMBER. we're talking several tens of thousands of dollars. This is just one stack.

These are all leftover eight stack triangles from making stacked quilt tops! They do pile up! Thinking about a way to use some with a minimum of trimming involved.

CN 2327 & CN 2122 lead an eastbound stack train through Whitby at sunset.

Stone stack with blue sky and angled horizon.

Smoke Stacks on the Shafer Queen Boat ride.

  

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Always nice to get the first group of blocks on the design wall, especially when I'm adding some bold color like the yellow and turquoise. The dark blues for the sashings and some of the block triangles are scrappy because I didn't have enough of any one blue in that general shade, which is fine with me because I like that look.

The wood is in at East Hill Farm, Troy, NH

Sketchbooks, paint box, and boxes full of goodness.

I'm going to try these two fabrics together in some stacked octagons. Hopefully, there will be enough contrast to make the Kaleidoscope circles show in the design.

Stacked at Sabine Pass. Designed by LeTourneau of Vicksburg MS, one of the Rowan Group of companies, the Gorilla V is the world's largest jackup rig - capable of drilling in ~100 meters of water.

Fans watch practice behind a stack of pads at the Cleveland Browns Training Camp 2015 in Berea, Ohio

This pretty fabric is making some nice stacked blocks! It's hard to beat florals for stacking :)

Stacked of chips (1cm thick, deepfried for 5 minutes) of sweet white potato.

 

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