View allAll Photos Tagged blocking
.Fabrics are chosen and block #1 in finished. I am happy with my choices and look forward to seeing yours.
Muscatine, Iowa; built in 1854. Only two sections remain of what was once a five-section block. The other three sections were demolished in 1949.
It's been a year since I've made any blocks. I felt like it was time again, so I'm going to make one small run.
They are ridiculously cheap and lookin' for good homes. This one is approximately 6x12, signed, numbered and made to hang...or place...or however you see fit.
You can look in the "art?" set and see some from last year. Once sold however, I delete them.
Message me for info.
Taken in Coeur d'Alene, ID. Polaroid SX-70, Type 779.
Oh yeah.
Triple Tees.
T for Tiryakioglu.
T for THANK YOU TO MY REVIEWERS!
T for Totally rockin'.
T for Trust.
T for Truth.
T for Teeth.
T for Take.
T for whaTever.
:D
pattern from here
Anyone wanna trade spiderweb blocks?
I would LOVE to make a spiderweb quilt with blocks from my flickr friends!
I'm starting to make more spiderweb blocks with solid blue centers...
This is the inside corner of a gass block wall. The colors are from the rooms beyond the wall. This was taken in the waiting room of a car dealership.
Bingham Signal Box block instruments, light indicator unit, signal repeaters and Manual timed releases (Welwyn releases) and GN block bell. For reasons I don't understand the block instruments do not use the bells integral to the units but instead use the original GN block bells, the one on the left is that relating to the block to Rectory which will dissapear in 2013 when Rectory is abolished and Bingham becomes a fringe box to Derby EMCC. The bell for the right hand block to Bottesford West is hidden behind the block instrument out of sight.
Age 3+ I think these would be a choking hazard for a 3 year old - but I was never a parent so what would I know...
Photo by Dan Tucker
BLOCK
A show by NoFit State Circus and Motionhouse.
NoFit State Circus and Motionhouse bring together their unique styles in BLOCK - an exciting new collaboration. Twenty oversized blocks are deconstructed and reformed into an infinite variety of shapes for the performers to play on, move with and explore. BLOCK is about life in the city; its contradictions and challenges. What happens when dance and circus collide? When they converge, rub against each other, blend into one another?
Commissioned by Without Walls, Stockton International Riverside Festival, Norfolk & Norwich Festival and Out There International Festival of Circus & Street Arts. Co-production Archaos, Pôle National des Arts du Cirque Méditerranée and Le CITRON JAUNE, Centre National des Arts de la Rue.
Supported by Arts Council England, Cyngor Celfyddydau Cymru/ Arts Coucil Wales, Llywodraeth Cymru/ Welsh Government, and the Big Lottery.
A bright and reflective building in Manchester. Couldn't resist the photo opportunity, even though I was there for work.
A butcher carries the block on which meat is cut and divided for distribution based on the shariah law during Korbani. Always, the face of the bearer is overshadowed by the burden borne.
All finished :)
Not sure if this will be the final layout but I'm very happy with the way all the blocks look together
Such happy colors
Thank you John Adams (Quilt Dad)
for a great quilt-a-long
A quaint little Island off the coast of Bristol, RI. The day I took the ferry over, the seas looked to be about 10 to 15 feet high and I was leaving trails of my breakfast over the open sea within 10 minutes.
A group of boyscouts were on board, running all over the boat in gleeful anticipation of the day ahead, stomachs as sturdy as rocks. One young scout responded to my immediate distress (hopefully he's an Eagle scout by now, he had a good heart) asking me if I was alright. At that point I just wanted to die, the thought of jumping off the boat came to mind. I was staring at the island on the horizon, not just thinking of getting there but thinking I had to get on the boat and come back. I have never felt so sick in my life.
It's amazing how good the picture looks and how I forget how miserable I was. Ahhh the beauty of photography and what a Nikon can do even in the hands of a shaky, weak-kneed photographer. The stone walls are a classic bit of beauty seen all over New England. I've always wondered exactly who built them all. They were a necessary part of clearing the land back in the day. Most of this area was settled in the late 1600's. My home town was incorporated in 1667. That's rather old for the USA. Not so for Europeans.
I look at this shot now and know I should have zoomed out just a bit, but I'm lucky I got any pictures at all that day. I wanted to curl up and just sleep till my body stopped roiling from the waves. Ahhh happy vaction memories.
The glass block window in the vestibule of the Towson Diner
holds such wondrous colors and shapes. I think I took 100
photos of the blocks. They're all different.
My last shift of my 27 months up here was at Goxhill overnight on Tuesday 29th to Wednesday 30th December 2015. Simply there for engineering. Siemens called in at about 01.30 for half an hour which was nice and then at 05.00 the possession limits were altered.
During the course of their visit I noted the block to Ulceby had been removed and passed comment as to the removal of the pegging block to Oxmarsh and it's replacement with that from the up fast at Barnetby East. They then disappeared with the key underneath the box and shouted up that the old block instruments to Ulceby were underneath the box.
A picture was taken.
Goxhill Signal Box.
01.51 Hrs, Wednesday 30th December 2015.
Part of "res noscenda note notiz" / Blocked, AugenBorgen.
3 Fotos: DMC-G2 - P1190753 (Gerüst Schönbrunn Bearbeitung) + Fisheye2_Aug2011_000003600025 + Diana Instant-Back Fuji Sofortbild
#zensur #geblockt #blocked #schnittmuster #prokrustes #procrustes #prokrustesbett #warrior #krieger #water #wasser #spiegel #mirror
This is another shot taken at Sands Point Preserve on Long Island. Lots of wood and garbage is still laying further up the beach from Hurricane Sandy. 24mm 2.8D