View allAll Photos Tagged Teacup
Tea party Birthday Card. Embossed front of cards and paper behind vellum to look like a tea bag.
Card Template: Mel Stamps
Stamp: JR Just a Note (inside)
Other journaling is computer generated.
Paper:
Cardstock in white, pink, green, purple
Vellum
Ink: Black
Misc:
SB Circle plain & Scallop
CB folders Textile, D'vine swirls,
Floral Fantasy, Gratitude
white twine
staples & stapler
Punches:
Green Apron Lace
Purple Threading Water
Pink Embossed Scallop
A burnt teacup I found in an abandoned mining camp in Idaho. You can see that when the forest fire burned through the camp it was hot enough to melt the edges of the cup. 13AUG08
culled from the shores of the thames river, then placed in a beautiful cabinet by mark dion for "tate thames dig"
Main character in one of my stories. Her real name is Teadora Bennet, but she insists on people calling her Teacup.
These images were captured around the cottage originally built as a wedding present for their daughter.
Seems like we went from 50 degrees and jackets to 80 degrees and shorts overnight. No matter, it was a welcome relief so off to Chanticleer Gardens we went with cameras in hand.
Chanticleer is in Wayne PA in suburban Philadelphia just a 1-1/4 hour drive from home. Pretty easy to get to.
Our prime mission was to simply get outside for a few hours and take some pictures. In a few short weeks, we’ll be headed to Europe so we also wanted to test drive capturing images WITHOUT our interchangeable lens cameras. In my case that would be an iPhone X, a GoPro, and a 360 camera. It was only iPhone X for Kathy. Both of us had iPhones mounted into a grip for easier handling.
The first issue we ran into was simply being able to see what was on our iPhone screens. The bright sun and reflections made it almost impossible to see controls. I was using FILMic Pro for video and a camera control app for stills. We were barely able to simply compose an image. Half hour in, we found a shady spot to check results and were surprised at how well exposed our images were. Sharpness, for the most part, was spot on.
I hosted a tea cup swap with the Marie Antoinette Mail Art Group and this is the tea cup that I gave my partner Terri H.
Leaf Teacup and Saucer
Bone China English Castle (Made in Staffordshire England)
Passed down to me by paternal Grandmother
Teacup
Preservation System
The first known account of the TPS was by a demolition team tasked with clearing the building of anything that could be hazardous.
The TPS was found with other implements used for tea in a lower basement room apparently utilized as a study. The true function of the TPS is unknown but some speculate it was a sterilization apparatus or an early “dishwasher”.
D-Bro, a Japanese design brand, has designed a unique pair of mirrored cups called “Waltz” that gain their impressive patterns and shades by reflecting them from the saucers they come with. These patterns look distorted on the saucers but they are changed into more ordered forms by the mirrored c...