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Não sei porque, mas me bateu uma saudade do Bomb Of Designs, e lembrei de um lay com o mesmo shoot. Decidi fazer uma header nos mesmos tons com o mesmo shoot e fiquei feliz com o resultado. Tentei retratar a blogosfera de 5, 6 meses atrás, acham que eu consegui? Comentem!
Header design by Tom Morley
Many engineers and/or framers use 2 - 2x12's for headers to be sure they are "covered" no matter what the load. Sovick Design/Builders size our headers for the specific sized openings and incorporate rigid insulation into the header to break the thermal bridge created by the header.
This illustration is from a retelling of Norse mythology in the 1930 edition of Annie Keary's The Heroes of Asgard (1857) illustrated by Charles E. Brock. The book is divided into nine stories beginning with the Creation Myth and ending with Ragnarök. The stories are further divided into parts which have illustrated headers and illustrated capital letters. This header illustration in Story VI: "Baldur" for Part IV: “Weeping“ depicts that nearly everyone in the world, with one exception of Þökk who is not in the illustration, is weeping for Baldr in an attempt to persuade Hel to release him.
Editor's Note: The third edition of The Heroes of Asgard was published in 1930 as The Heroes of Asgard: Tales from Scandinavian Mythology and was illustrated by Charles E. Brock (1870 – 1938). This is the edition that most readers are familiar with today. The Brock edition contains eighty-five illustrations with sixteen colour plates. The text of the tales remained the same, but the scholarly introduction and the notes of the second edition were eliminated. The Brock edition was republished in 2012, by Dover Publications as Tales of the Norse Warrior Gods: The Heroes of Asgard, but not all of the plates are in colour and several were relocated, i,e., to the front cover and inside the covers. Unfortunately, without the framing conversations from the first edition or the academic apparatus from the second edition, naive readers of the third edition sometimes believe that the retellings represent the cultural and religious beliefs of Old Norse pagans. (Baer, Trish. “A Brief Overview of the Editions of The Heroes of Asgard” The Heroes of Asgard (1930) ).
The MyNDIR site features illustrations from manuscripts and early print books that are not on our Flickr page and can be viewed on MyNDIR: myndir.uvic.ca/. The Flickr page is part of the SSHRC IDG project to add illustrations to the repository from Victorian and Edwardian retellings of Old Norse myths and sagas.
Brock, C. E.. Header for "Weaping". From: Keary, Annie, and Eliza Keary. The Heroes of Asgard: Tales from Scandinavian Mythology. London: Macmillan and Co. Limited, 1930. 178. MyNDIR: My Norse Digital Image Repository. Ed. P. A. Baer. 2024. Edition 2.6. Victoria, B. C.: Humanities Computing and Media Centre, University of Victoria. 2024.
I got bored one day and decided that I would create a blog header. Made using Adobe Illustrator.
No real theme behind it.
Esse blog nem existe kkkkk .Mas... eu fiz a header assim mesmo. As fotos estão em péssima qualidade, mas eu salvei em psd. sou esperto kk. to querendo melhorar meus design.