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I make no apologies for giving you attempt No 2 at my new venture into cushion cover making. I LOVE this material, it is a piece of art in its own right, I think.

   

These earrings have'nt had an airing for around 32 years, when my Great Aunt died in her 82nd year and probably a fair few years before that too.... I think they are too pretty, especially in colour to hide any longer ....

Miss Barbie wearing a "Hearts & Roses" day dress with multi coloured flowerpattern on a black background.

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Circular flower perler bead pattern. For even more patterns, see www.squidoo.com/perler-bead-patterns

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Eva: "basically"

 

special thanks to JadeBratz for helping me with the flowerpattern :)

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Mikasa's Granville pattern was popular in the early 1980s. Today, it is becoming increasingly hard to find, although replacement pieces are still fairly reasonable. For example, a basic plate like this can be found for $30.00.

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

A blueprint or cyanotype from our Stoddard-Templeton Collection.

 

Within the Design Records there are a small number of cyanotypes, or blueprints, of early Templeton carpet designs.

 

In addition to photographing carpets bought by and loaned to the company, it would appear that the Templeton in-house photographer also recorded all their design sketches and patterns, which were then pasted into volumes. The vast majority of the photographs are either black and white or sepia images, with the latter having degraded somewhat overtime. In comparison however, the few cyanotypes within the collection remain very crisp and clear.

 

(Ref STOD/201/1/7/23/01)

Detail of curtains in my study [just a fancy name for the 3rd bedroom!!!! :) ]. You may need to squint a bit to see it......!!

 

Posted for the Macro Mondays group weekly them "Pareidolia".

 

HMM to all in the group.

Pattern pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

One of my first paid Model Shoots

 

A quick self portrait in a creepy hotel in Galena (although the building was unique and lovely, it reminded me very much of The Shining). ps - yes, that is an Assassin's Creed shirt ;)

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Vintage Hanky with Geometric Pattern - Embroidered Flowers - Flowers

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

oder: Schwäbisches Dim Sum, mit Quiche-Resterl

My modest lunch today, a veg soup with filled pasta dim sum lookalikes, with a piece of home-made brussels quiche

Venus Laowa 65mm 2X Macro lens

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

Vintage Depression Era Embroidered Flower Basket Quilt Squares, Yellow Embroidery on Green Fabric

Miss Barbie wearing a "Hearts & Roses" day dress with multi coloured flowerpattern on a black background.

Lace background, pink ornamental flowers

This decorative and aesthetic feature lampshade diffuse the light it emits to the walls of our staircase - the house in Shah Alam.

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

Flowers at the prospect park farmers market.

"Yooralbyn" is a magnificent boom period mansion on the brow of Richmond Hill in Erin Street , in the Melbourne suburb of Richmond.

 

"Yooralbyn" was built in 1889 for William Harper, a partner in a leading Melbourne merchant and manufacturing firm. The house was one of the many great mansions and elegant terraces built on Richmond Hill by local merchants and manufacturers during the 1880s boom period. The mansion, substantially in-tact, still stands in its original grounds and retains some of its original Nineteenth Century garden layout and plantings. There are several magnificent mature trees in the grounds, including a Moreton Bay fig with a wide canopy and a palm tree which is now taller than the three storey tower of "Yooralbyn" itself! The exterior of the building is particularly impressive, with its central urn capped tower, Ionic portico and flanking verandahs adorned with wrought iron lacework.

 

When the boom of the 1880s and early 1890s turned to bust, many of the nouveau riche families living in the mansions of Richmond Hill found themselves hit by hard times and either had to parcel off portions of their large estates or sell altogether. When they left, much of Richmond Hill became working-class. "Yooralbyn" is a rare remaining example of a Nineteenth Century boom-style mansion in largely working class Richmond, and reminds us of the opulent lifestyle of Richmond's (and Melbourne's) elite during the late Victorian era.

 

In 1903, Bethesda Hospital started operating out of "Yooralbyn" (which they renamed "Elim" after one of the places where the Israelites camped following their Exodus from Egypt). It was a pioneering hospital and when it first opened it had private rooms and special treatment for private patients. Intermediate patients were asked to pay what they could afford, whereas poor patients received treatment free of charge. This arrangement worked well until the Great Depression in the 1930s.

 

In 1998 the Epworth acquired the Bethesda Hospital, and "Elim" is used as the centre for physiotherapy. The original stables have been converted into an indoor heated swimming pool, yet they, and "Yooralbyn" itself, retain much of its original look of 1889.

Pattern that I created. Feel free to download it for personal use only. If you're interested in commercial use, please get in touch with me: elsammora@gmail.com

 

Thanks

 

Elsa

 

www.allaboutpapercutting.com/

Miss Barbie wearing a "Hearts & Roses" day dress with multi coloured flowerpattern on a black background.

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