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Soldered charms of mothers pictures on one side and soldered charm pictures of Father on the other side. Blue calico fabric and trims with an encausted wax coating.
I spray painted a pizza sheet, added alcohol inks as I experiment with things in making a 'fixture' to feature my altered magnets with. Now, to figure out how to get this to hang without having to drill it!
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This bead has a yellow and lime green core, encased with several layers of clear, with bands of color layered in-between. The surface is decorated with six colorful handmade murrini and fine flack trails and dots. After annealing and cleaning, I used diamond-embedded tools to grind down the bottom of the bead and carved a few holes in the surface, including one going all the way through the bead, through which hangs a fine silver lampwork headpin charm wrapped with yellow enameled silver plated copper wire. The carved surfaces were polished to a matte finish to ensure smooth surfaces.
29.5mm(1.15")/41mm(1.6”) tall, 32mm wide, and 11mm (~3/8) thick with a 3/32" (2.5mm) hole.
Public House. Late C18, refronted and altered c1880. Stucco over brick; tile roof and brick stacks. Double-depth plan. 3 storeys; 2-window range. Ground floor has terms supporting frieze and cornice; frieze and cornice to 1st floor, and top cornice; flat pilaster to right. Ground floor has windows with fixed frames with transoms and 3 upper lights, leaded glazing; 1st floor has canted bay windows with small-paned upper lights; 2nd floor has low segmental-headed windows. Central entrance has swan-necked pediment, blind fan and paired 3-panel doors; panel above has cartouche with cross and lettering: OLD STILL/INN and shallow segmental pediment above. 2 cross-axial stacks, one with corbelled-out cap. Rear similar. INTERIOR retains some c1880 fittings. One of a row of Georgian houses in King Street, built after 1751. EH Listing
Weathered, hydrothermally altered volcanic rocks in the Quaternary of Wyoming, USA.
Hydrothermal metamorphism refers to intense alteration of rocks by superheated groundwater. The altered volcanic rocks seen here are in the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone River, in northwestern Wyoming. Yellowstone is a hotspot volcano having over 100,000 surficial hydrothermal features. These take the form of hot springs, geysers, fumaroles, and mudpots.
The rocks of the canyon include rhyolite lava flows, rhyolitic volcanic tuffs, and some sedimentary deposits - all are geologically young and date to the Quaternary. Active and dormant hydrothermal areas are plentiful in the canyon. Alteration has resulted in the rocks taking on many colors: yellows, pinks, reds, and oranges (see elsewhere in this photo album).
Locality: outcrop along tourist trail at Inspiration Point, northern rim of the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, northwestern Wyoming