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Handmade envelope with old buildings that I received from a mail artist friend and gave to another friend.

Envelope collab set up for Eyor

Handmade envelope with a Halloween theme, made from a page of a Victorian calendar. Sent to a Postcrossing member in the United States.

Large envelope that I received in a swap. As you can see, it has been decorated with rubber stamped and stenciled flowers.

Envelope with a picture of flamingos and water printed on it. Sent to a Postcrossing member in the United States.

I posted an Envelope Turtorial and my blog, this afternoon.

Envelope that I made from a page of a Victorian calendar for 2020 and sent to a friend in Texas.

Envelope that I made from a calendar page. Sent to a Postcrossing member in Japan.

A scarce piece of photographic incunabula, an envelope from the firm of Pinkham & Smith, inventors & manufacturers of arguably the most famous soft focus lens, the "Semi-Achromatic" as used by F. Holland Day, Alvin Langdon Coburn and many other founders of Pictorialism.

Here is my Semi-Achromatic lens: www.flickr.com/photos/strathedenfarm/53089075182/in/album...

 

From "Find-A-Grave" a brief biography of the remarkable Dr. Briggs:

L. (Lloyd) Vernon Briggs (1863-1941), M.D., 1889, Medical College of Virginia at Richmond was a psychiatrist and medical reformer in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He was active in seeking changes to the laws regarding the evaluation and incarceration of people with mental illness and in suggesting reforms to the asylum, prison, hospital systems in the Commonwealth.

 

L. Vernon Briggs began attending medical lectures at Harvard Medical School at the age of sixteen with the consent of the professor, Henry I. Bowditch (1808-1892). Briggs was diagnosed with pulmonary tuberculosis before he could matriculate into medical school. On the advice of his physician, Briggs took a sea voyage around South America to Hawaii in 1880. He settled temporarily in Hawaii and received an appointment as Deputy Vaccinating Officer on Oahu from the Hawaiian government. Briggs returned to Boston in the mid-1880s. In pursuit of his medical degree, Briggs took courses at Tufts University, Dartmouth College, and Harvard Medical School; he also took a position as a physician's assistant. He received his M.D. From the Medical College of Virginia in 1889.

 

Briggs worked closely with Walter Channing (1849-1921) during the 1890s and early 1910s, taking a position as physician at Channing's private sanatorium in Brookline, Massachusetts. Briggs also held positions at the Boston State Hospital and on the Massachusetts State Board of Insanity. He was largely responsible for the passage in early 1923 of legislation nicknamed "The Briggs Law," which required the psychiatric evaluation of people held in custody and charged with a felony before the commencement of criminal procedures against them.

 

Briggs volunteered for military service at the outbreak of World War I. He worked primarily at Camp Devens in Massachusetts designing psychiatric tests for servicemen. After the war, he was active in veterans' service organizations.

Handmade envelope that I made from a page of a bird calendar. Sent to a Postcrosser in the Netherlands.

Vintage Envelope with text featuring Embroidery, August 09.

Envelope made with henna, glitter paint, acrylic spray to protect.

Envelope with a large picture of a flower. This was actually an advertisement that I received in the mail that I added collage embellishments to. Sent to a mail artist friend in France.

Envelope that I decorated with a calendar page and washi tape. The picture is of a painting called Illustration of a Cruise Ship with Passengers, done in 1928. Sent to a Postcrossing member in Austria.

Watercolor and brush lettering with Tombow markers.

Why not a bolt? My dad was eclectic in what he’d draw on an envelope. This was on a letter to my mother-in-law. (1997)

Another embroidered envelope!

blogged

we all do feel that sometimes

Vintage Envelope with text featuring Embroidery, August 09.

Leipzig, Germany

wroclaw, social housing - galeriowiec na powstansow slaskich

'chúc mừng năm mới 2016'

 

Captured of Money Tree with Red Envelopes, a gift of luck and wealth during the Lunar New Year celebration.

 

San Gabriel, California USA

Los Angeles County.

Sony Alpha6000

Large handmade envelope that I made from a page of a Victorian calendar and sent to a mail artist friend in the United States.

Another view of Ms. Skellie strolling through the cemetery.

Envelope with a picture of purple flowers that I made out of a calendar page and sent to a Postcrossing member in the United States.

Hand decorated envelope with a floral theme that I received in a swap awhile back. Sent to a Postcrossing member in France.

Thanks to everyone in this group who made envelopes for me. I love how this has turned out.

 

Blogged: justjulielou.blogspot.co.nz/2015/09/weekending-finish.html

My husband is a huge fan of Netflix. Besides streaming their online content, he gets their movies through the mail. I thought that this envelope with the 1988 film Beetlejuice looked pretty cool; so I took this picture.

Colorful handmade envelope that I received in a swap. Sent to a friend for her birthday.

First, I cannot remember the exact date when I created this envelope. This slightly cropped image was sent to me recently by my great friend, Alyson. She is now Alyson Kuhn, by the way. With the exception of the foil, what you see here are collaged prints from eraser carvings that I created over several years. The Paper Chicken was a delightful little shop that specialized in unique papers, envelopes and postal ephemera. It is long gone. My return address is also long, long gone.

These envelopes have been turned inside out and then the inside layered with colorful designs from magazines. The (original) inside of the envelopes were already printed with fun designs and I've attached a label so that you can easily address the letter.

Envelope with a picture of tulips by a fence. I made this from a calendar page. Sent to a Postcrossing member in Canada.

Yeah. THE Envelope.

bellatrix3391.blogspot.com/

 

Week 24 - August 23rd 2007

 

French - A (A*, A*, A*,B)

Spanish - A (Again: A*, A*, A*,B)

Latin - B!!!!

Science - BB (only one I'm disappointed in, but my coursework let me down I think)

RE - A

Maths - A (One I was most nervous about)

English - AA

Drama - B (But I never really cared about Drama.)

 

Explore no 55

Fotografia: Tamy Mauri (@ladelasupercam)

 

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Handmade envelope with a calendar page featuring a picture of a detail of a painting called October Sundown, Newport, done in 1901 by Childe Hassam (1859 -1935). Sent to a mail artist friend.

Handmade envelope with a picture of something that looks like a tunnel. I received this in a swap and sent it to a Postcrosser in Pensacola, Florida for a swap.

Design: Jodi Fukomoto

 

Find more information, including the book where the diagram can be found here: origamitutorials.com/origami-lucky-frog-envelope/

Here’s some fitting music.

 

The Kurnass (קוּרְנָס/Sledgehammer) was born from an attempt to improve the Nammer’s performance by adding larger, more powerful engines. When the airframe proved to be too small, a completely new one was built around the new engines. Just like the Nammer, it is a large two-seater, with the rear seat being occupied by a Weapon Systems Officer. The ventrally-mounted 20 mm rotary cannon from the Nammer was also carried over.

 

What had changed was the speed, and the Kurnass does not disappoint. Capable of reaching Mach 2.23 (2,370 km/h / 1,472 mph), the new powerful engines also give the Kurnass an impressive rate of climb. The range of 2, 460 km/1528 mi is enhanced by the capability of aerial refuelling by flying boom. Just like the Nammer, the Kurnass is an “honest aircraft”. Flown well, it will do exactly as requested, but it has the tendency to bite back if pilots don’t give it their full attention. Low speed handling is not ideal, but when operating in its performance envelope, the Kurnass is reasonable at dogfighting. The crew is usually quite pleased with the Kurnass, except with its cockpit, which is cramped for the WSO and demanding for the pilot, due to the bad instrument layout.

 

Armament (next to the cannon) consists of 8,500 kg/18,740 lbs of possible ordnance, with nine hardpoints (Four wing pylons, one centreline and four recesses) to carry all that weight. Usual air-superiority armament consists of four advanced Raam (רעם/Thunder) missiles in fuselage recesses, four heat-seeking Gomorra missiles, and two drop tanks. The remaining spot is almost always occupied by a jamming pod. A variety of other missiles and bombs (both guided and unguided) can also be carried.

This Kurnass is seen taking off in a fighter-bomber configuration, with four Raam missiles, four AGMs, and six 227 kg/ 500 lb bombs. The standard jamming pod can be seen on the centreline station.

 

Handmade envelope with a picture of a detail of an oil painting called The Watermill, done in 1896 by Henri J. F. Rousseau (1844 - 1910). Sent to a Postcrossing member in the United States.

Envelope that I made from a page of a calendar with art by Boris Vallejo and Julie Bell, who live in Allentown, Pennsylvania. This painting is of an African American mermaid. I gave this to my husband for our anniversary on January 8, 2017.

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