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It is said that Halloween night, the Great Pumpkin rises out of his pumpkin patch and flies through the air with his bag of toys for all the children.
Micah and Lee messin around in the pumpkin patch the last day at the studio.
Strobist:
430ex Camera Right
Vivitar Camera Left
ST-E2
Patches of paint make interesting shapes and colours on a wall. To top it off, there are two nice vents in the middle of it all. (014a)
Imagine my shock at finding these two little ones in a trash pile!
Although they are/were strangers to me, I wanted to pick them up, clean them up, and find them a new home.
My daughter loved her cabbage patch dolls, and all the accessories that went with them, while she was young. I think she would have been as shocked as I was...
I wandered past the patch panel one day and liked what I saw. It's not all cabled to Systimax spec but it works.
Patch Budder in small thick paper box. Box is brown and has experienced some water damage to the top. One small face of the box has the following text, reading "Jones' Patch Budder / Pat'd Feb. 6th 1912 / J. F. Jones Lancaster, Pa." Inside is the patch budder, which is made of metal and contains a curved handle and four blades that are positioned to form a rectangle when looking at them from above. Inside is also a folded paper titled, "Budding Nut Trees," which details the Patch Method to "propagating nut trees" according to Jones. The paper is yellowed and delicate, has some ripes along the edges. Box is 3" x 1 5/8" x 1 1/4".
Belonged to Dr. Mila E. Rindge or her doctor father, Milo. Learn more about her at www.madisonhistory.org/doctor-in-the-house/. Purchased at a local antique store as a collection inside classic doctor’s bag by MHS Director Jennifer Simpson in October 2020
ACC# 2020.120.004
See other medical related items in the MHS museum at flic.kr/s/aHsmTm2Swj
(Photo credit - Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
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I set my blocks on point. I love the look of this. I can't wait for Jenny to quilt it for me. Thanks for agreeing to do it, Jenny!
Blogged at peasinapod.typepad.com/peas-in-a-pod/2012/11/urban-nine-p...
Pumpkin patch outside Boulder.
This photo has been submitted as the starter picture for Photoshop Contest - Week 285 ~ Pumpkin Patch, because I won last week's contest (woo-hoo!).
Here are some hats purchased from a recent estate sale for $2.00 each. The black Sargent’s Equipment & Repair Service hat’s (4 in all) are new / never worn and still had the cardboard anti crush inserts inside them. Sargent’s has two locations, Chicago Heights, IL and Gilbert’s, IL.
Located in Alsip, IL., the round McAllister Equipment Co patch was originally on the red corduroy hat pictured here. The CAT patch was on a badly mangled, yellow screen mesh hat.
The original idea was to sew all three patches on three different polo shirts, but the Ozinga patch looked to be too big for a shirt. It’s 4 x 2.5 inches. So, I sewed it back on the other red hat.
The OZINGA patch was originally on a red cotton hat that had a foam lining in it that was disintegrating from age. I think the hat may have been meant to be worn under a hard hat?
OZINGA is a Cement Company throughout the Chicago suburbs.
I was going to throw out the red corduroy hat , but after a closer inspection it too looked like a never worn hat, just covered with some dirt and dust from sitting in a box. All six hats were a bit dusty and dirty from sitting around but after a good washing they came out great looking.
I hate the foam front, screen mesh hats because they tend to sit 2 inches above the top of your head and make you look like; "Big Head". It had my brand of motor oil (Castrol GTX) that I’ve been driving on for over 500,000 miles, so I bought it. I just won’t wear it.
The original Ozinga and Cat hats were thrown out.
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A hand embroidered patch of a drawing I made on wool felt.
This little chap is perfect to add embellishment to a bag or clothes, or even just to have it up on your wall.
It is backed with the same felt, for strenght and thickness.
Some patch leads that I used to use with my old soundcraft mixer.
Part of my Patch Leads (Set)
patched the Girl's jeans by placing a bit of blue and yellow Liberty fabric from Joey under the jeans and randomly machine sewing it to the jeans. She's pleased ... says it looks like boxers! :-)
Cabbage Patch Kids Dolls
Company: Coleco (original)
Debut: 1978
If someone were to ask what was the craze during the 1980's, that answer would be three words. Cabbage Patch Kids. You could purchase outfits, diapers, and they even came with a birth certificate as well. People (especially Mother's) were even fighting in check-out lines just to get their doll, mostly for their kids, of course.
I only had two Cabbage Patch dolls. I got my first one back in 1983.
They made just about anything and everything with the Cabbage Patch Kids name on it. Pencils, dolls, toys, calendars, buttons, coloring books, lunch boxes, traveling suit cases, figurines, TV dinner trays, Halloween masks, mugs, glass cups, View Master, rocking crib, pop-ups (toys), and so much more. It was a thriving business.
Green Patch Beach, Jervis Bay.
Out this morning with some of the FOCUS group spending the weekend in Jervis Bay. We managed to beat the rain for the most part.
I thought this was an interesting sculpture. A lot of little details and lifelike features. I didn't know it at the time but it is a sculpture of a clown from a TV show called "The J.P. Patches Show". According to wikipedia it was was "one of the longer-running locally-produced children's television programs in the United States, having appeared on Seattle TV station KIRO channel 7 from 1958 to 1981."
I don't know if this is JP Patches himself or Gertrude. The circular thing on his hat says "Patch's Pal" so I think it is Gertrude but I don't know because I am unfamiliar with the show.