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Black Label Society perform at the Kool Haus in Toronto - 01.08.15
Photos by: Dale Benvenuto ©2015 please do not use without permission.
Sticker on top of chassis says:
Licensed By
Radio Corporation of America
"For Radio Amateur Experimental and Broadcast Reception"
The Manufacture and/or sale of this apparatus does not imply and license
under any patent relating to this structure or manufacture of Radio Tubes
-------------------------------------------Patents -------------------------------------
1,128,.280 etc., etc....
Also One or More Hazeltine And Latour Patents
re 16,461 etc., etc...
00629 <-- in larger text in a a box, printed in red.
Besides the quilting, the label is my favorite part!
{Making a Simple Label}
1. Fold a (10") square of light fabric in half on the diagonal. Press.
2. Piece (2") squares of prints into a strip at least half an inch longer than the length of your triangle's diagonal side. {I used 8 squares = 16"} Press your seams open to reduce bulk.
3. Press pieced strip in half, wrong sides together. Open; press edges of strip, wrong sides together, to the center fold. Press the whole thing "closed" good and well. {You're creating a straight forward binding}
4. Sandwich the long edge of the triangle between the folded edges of the binding and zig-zag stitch from one end to the other, catching both sides of the binding. Trim ends to match the angle of the label.
5. Pen your label, making sure you center the message --- my writing is set an inch and a half in from each edge. I also printed out my message and used it as a guide for writing. I didn't trace it...just referenced it for spacing...and it made such a difference!
6. How you attach the label depends on how you finish your quilt. For this quilt, I place the raw edges of my label against the raw edges of the quilt back. I pinned the double-fold binding on top, stitched around the perimeter, and folded my binding to the front. The label is caught between the binding and the quilt for a very nice finish!
Optional: I left my label loose, like a pocket. You could tack it down if you wanted...
Photo of a label in my collection, this is an unusual one, lovely Victorian graphics, an unusual product, and from New Zealand
This is what the finished label will look like. (Redundant copy "lime" is in French - even though lime is the same in French as in English, and so is Cilantro, probably!)
See next image for an approximation of how it will look on the box.
For a commercial packaging project for one of my clients, one of several fragrance labels for votive candles.
How adorable! Bella spotted herself pictured in a stand at one of our Write on Label pop-up stores.
If you spot one of our stores around shopping centres these school holidays, chat to our friendly team members who will show you how easy our labels are to use. goo.gl/iJa9El
Some of the labels can be printed with inkjet/laser printer or copier. However, some materials are specifically for laser printers, some for inkjet printers
A beer label for the Belgian Pale Ale I brewed up in Sept-October 2010. I used this Creative Commons photo from Flickr, which apparently depicts a Laotian monk on a bike.
The Chinese character 山 means "mountain"; it is pronounced "san" in Korean, so the "brand name" on my homebrew is "Wonmi-san" or "Wonmi Mountain."
Manufactured using the very latest digital printing press technologies our digital printed labels are among the finest in a very competitive industry. The labels illustrated above will be used to launch a new product line of food supplements for the domesticated animal market and so needed the outstanding print detail, quality and turnaround times that Etiquette could offer. www.etiquette.co.uk
No Labels hosted bipartisan political and business leaders at 1787: Constructing The Peace After The War, on Monday December 5, 2016 in Washington, D.C.
Beer label from my collection
Do you want start exchange labels or maybe you have somethig for sell ?
Please contact