View allAll Photos Tagged baskets
I made this little container by using my Cricut die cutter, I used the Tags, Bags, Boxes and More cartridge. Then I embellished it.
The lid fits snugly, and the bar is removable. She made the handle long enough that a ball of size 10 knit-crosheen will fit on the bar & not hid the spool lid handle.
willow baskets made by Katherine Lewis and exhibited at "Arts at the Port", Anacortes Arts Festival 2012.
The local elite basketball players, training in the UCC-hall. My original idea was only to shoot with a wide angle, but it turned out that with the speed of the game (and my lack of the same), I had to try slightly different focal lengths ...
Basket man in the courtyard of the Badshahi Mosque, Lahore, Pakistan.
The Badshahi Mosque, or the 'Emperor's Mosque', was built in 1673 by the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb. It is one of the city's best known landmarks, the second largest mosque in Pakistan and a major tourist attraction epitomising the beauty and grandeur of the Mughal era.
The white marble structure before the mosque is the Hazuri Bagh Baradari which was built by Maharaja Ranjit Singh in 1818 with marble pillaged from various Moghul tombs and from the floor of the Hammam, or royal bath, in Lahore Fort. (which is directly behind me).
A baradari, in Persian and Moghul architecture, is a building or room with 12 doors which is designed to allow the free draught of air through it. Persons of repute used it as a venue for formal and informal settings in hot weather.
This basket is made of horizontal splint wood, which is woven with coiled cedar root. The design features diamond patterns woven in, possibly from cherry bark. It measures 6” in diameter, and 4” tall.
Accession Number: MM-249-052
Location: Pacific Northwest, North America
Collection: Elinor and Vincent Ostrom Collection
For more information, photo permissions, or higher resolution images, please contact the Mathers Museum of World Cultures at mathers@indiana.edu.
My dog, Tia, birthed a couple of pups, born February 5th 2010. The bitch has been going by the nickname Hope but looks likely to be called Aspen, whilst her brother has been going by the name Murphy.
This is Murphy, with his eyes still closed, taking up the whole basket :o About two weeks old.
Shot taken with Panasonic Lumix G1, 14-45mm lens.
Best viewed in large.
The basket pattern tutorial comes from Pink Penguin at ayumills.blogspot.com/2008/05/tutorial-fabric-basket.html
The pieced section uses the 13-Square foundation from Miniatures in Minutes. See the basket project at my website (http://terriesandelin.com) for instructions on how to size the foundation for the basket.
The finished size of the basket is approximately 5 1/2" wide and 5" deep.