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File name: 10_03_002189b
Binder label: Thread
Title: White, black and colors for hand and machine [back]
Date issued: 1870 - 1900 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print : chromolithograph ; 7 x 12 cm.
Genre: Advertising cards
Subject: Dogs; Thread; Cotton; Animals in human situations, Sewing equipment & supplies
Notes: Title from item.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
I never owned ripped jeans
until today and I am glad they aren't all that ripped
because I have seen some that are way too ripped
this challenge was a challenge to me
I couldn't come up with something better for now..
ODC~ 4/12/12 - bottom half
Crew change and go has been the phrase of the day and it's 7:45pm on July 1st at C Street in Wellington, KS on the former Santa Fe Transcon mainline.
Eastbound ZPHXWSP7-30L with stacks up front crosses C Street in downtown Wellington. Clearly a power repositioning move as the 3860 tons & 5730 feet does not require 9 high-horsepower locomotives (a whopping 8.1 HPT).
Meanwhile, at the far end of the yard we see the head-end Citirail leased ES44AC on the point of the VBLUBAR3-01A with 4400 feet of autos for San Bernardino, Richmond and El Mirage.
File name: 10_03_002241a
Binder label: Thread
Title: J. & P. Coats' best six cord thread, white, black and colors for hand & machine [front]
Date issued: 1870 - 1900 (approximate)
Physical description: 1 print : chromolithograph ; 8 x 11 cm.
Genre: Advertising cards
Subject: Birds; Thread
Notes: Title from item.
Collection: 19th Century American Trade Cards
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions.
Set of threads found in an op shop for $30.
Part of the 30 Day Macro Challenge.
Blogged about here: theshoppingsherpa.blogspot.com/2008/04/and-im-also.html
old thread on wooden spools=beauty.
and then colored coordinated.
be still my crafty heart.
Found 3 boxes for $2 bucks.
can't beat that.
U.S. Navy 'Blue Angels'
As the Diamond formation makes its way across the flight line, the Opposing Solo (#6) quickly zooms past them from behind, flying at twice the speed. I believe this is one of the newer maneuvers of the Blue Angels, one that the USAF Thunderbirds have performed for many years.
something about this thread made me take many pictures of it. I couldn't even continue weaving for awhile, until I was done admiring its pattern...or something.
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Camera: Canon PowerShot A540
Exposure: 1.3
Aperture: f/8.0
Focal Length: 5.8 mm
ISO Speed: 80
Photo taken of a small light bulb
T-28, Ditto flown by Herb Baker; The World's Only Smoke-Ring Acrobatics. This is a very unique aerobatic demonstration using the wing-tip smoke generators. Herb tries to make smoke rings then fly through them on a 2nd pass.
This is part of a set I'll be adding to as time permits over the next couple of days. Please visit the whole set when you get a chance.
I was thinking of doing a running stitch around either the very top or just underneath the strip of contrast fabric, but I'm thinking it might be too much so I left it off. Also, if I were a better person, I'd rip out that edgestitching at the top and re-do it (see on the right where it went all wobbly?) but I have no big plans to.
My embroidery skills (such as they were to begin with) are rusty, but by the end I was finally getting an even backstitch. Clearly I need to do more embroidery! I also had trouble with the French knots popping through to the back of the fabric -- never had that happen before, so maybe it was something to do with the weave of the fabric?
didn't quite realise what we had gotten ourselves into, when this guy said he had some thread he didn't need anymore...
There is a story behind this. In one of my groups, I made mention of the fact that I walked to Wal-Mart just to purchase some blue thread. When I arrived, I'd forgotten to bring the piece of felt I wanted to make the best match -- so I bought 3 different shades of blue thread.
Later on, I decided to use black anyhow.
This pic is one of the results of today's way-back-in-hills rural country photo excursion with my friend Not Weird Enough, aka Jon Rogers. Oh...yes, he's weird enough. We had a great time getting away from town and into the backwoods!
I chose many different types of threads, including some very interesting vintage ones :) Blogged here.
Over 100 Spools with their matching bobbins on top.
Click on photo for link to PDF files showing how I made it.
www.mediafire.com/file/o15g1qv1xl1ggfr/AtHomeSewing Organizer.pdf
This pair of slippers are a fine examples of traditional embroidered and beaded footwear from Malaysia made in the early 20th century by ethnic Chinese women. These slippers were made by women of the Chinese community living in Malaysia and therefore are a nice complement to shoes for bound feet as worn by Han Chinese women of the same period.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, a distinctive Chinese community evolved in Peninsular Malaya. The group flourished in the former British colonies along the Straits of Malacca, namely, Penang, Malacca and Singapore. The community is referred to as Straits Chinese, also known as Chinese Baba or simply Baba. The women are called Nyonya. From the late 19th century until WWII young Nyonya of marriageable age were taught to sew and embroider articles for their personal use as well as for their wedding ceremony. These included pillow covers, bed hangings and decorative panels used in the bridal chamber. Of special significance was the embroidering and beading of the wedding slippers. The prospective bride prepared a range of slippers to be presented as part of her wedding dowry, to the groom and his family. To show off the bride's work a special showcase of embroidered footwear was displayed in the bridal chamber.
A pair of beaded slippers sewn by the bride herself would be worn for the first time on the third day of the wedding, and thereafter worn on less ceremonial occasions and eventually becoming casual footwear.
In the 1940s interest in traditional Nyonya embroidery waned and influenced by Western fashion many women were married in white wedding gowns and western footwear. With the resurgence in all things Nyonya in the late 1970s traditional methods of beading and embroidery came back into fashion.Slippers (pair), leather/cardboard/cloth/hemp/metal thread/beads, with embroidered uppers, Nyonya women, Malacca, Malaysia, c.1900.
Pair of slippers (kasut kodok or 'frog shoes') with covered toe and open back. The flat leather soles rising at the toes are made with layers of cardboard and edged with silk braid. They are stitched with twine and nailed to the uppers. The inner sole is made of red leather and the uppers lining of red cotton. The uppers have been hand embroidered while being loosely stretched over a wooden frame. Pieces of coloured velvet material have been glued to the silk base to provide a varied and colourful background for the embroidery for which shaped pieces of cardboard act as a form. Silver and gold metallic thread and silk thread embroidery, sequins, and beads are incorporated in the design of 2 seated rabbits on either side of the central quatrefoil motif together with a scrolling foliate design. A semi-circular toe piece provides a distinctive shape for the slippers.