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I've decided to bring back the art of the sampler! and do it in my handwriting. and add little line drawings of mine.
Viva Little House.
Check it out large-size...look how the stitches gleam and shimmer by the light of the scanner!
A sewing sampler made of white cotton with contrasting pale blue fabric, demonstrating a wide variety of skills.
74 cm x 76 cm
South Australia, 20th century (early)
2008.026
Evidence that the algorithmic process I'm using to generate my current "image as audio as image" series constitutes a dynamic system. The iterated function was a Fast Fourier Transform over four 512-pixel square images where three fixed frequency bins (3382 5473 8855 Hz) scaled RGB pixels by a constant (2.0). Each 512-pixel square had a different arrangement of 256-pixel square blocks of either white or 50% gray pixels. I iterated the FFT until the image stopped changing. The 512-pixel square blocks are all different—in some cases, even the wave forms underlying the pixels are different.
This sampler was sewn in 2010 by Linda Coleman as a Golden wedding gift for Basil & Shirley Knight of Fenny Compton
A tutorial for a modern bargello block, as part of the Something New Sampler series. Blogged here: thecutelifesmiles.blogspot.com/2013/01/something-new-samp...
Sampler of patterns from the New Caroligian Modelbook. For scale, fabric is sitting on an A4 sheet of paper.
We finally finished!! this is our first quilt as a group! We each had two fabrics in common and chose our own pattern and complimentary colorsfor our squares. We hand quilted the center and machine quilted the border. We will raffle this off for charity.
A true sampler in way that this is samples of random style letters and other things I practice with.
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Greek Food Festival-June 1-4, 2010
Pastico-baked pasta with ground beef and cheese filling,Spanakopita-spinach pie, Dolmades-stuff grapes leaves, meatballs and Tyropita-cheese filled pie.
We did take out as it was pushing 90.
Detail of my joins. I used single crochet to join all the blocks into rows and the rows to each other. I worked the sc's into the inside loops of the outer edge of crochet along each block.
I love single crochet for joining blocks because it looks tidy and neat and is very strong.
We've specialized in homemade fudge for over twenty years! The Fudge Pot is a family owned business in downtown Fairbanks, Alaska. We pour our passion into all 30 flavors of fudge, with real ingredients and Alaskan berries. Our fudge selections are the most pleasing sweets available in Alaska. Aside from candy making in the kitchen, we also serve delicious lunches and espressos. Come have a seat in our cozy cafe and enjoy a filling sandwich, hot soup, or a fresh salad. For dessert indulge in fudge, soft serve ice cream (summer only), a specialty blended drink, fudge turtles, or apples dipped in vanilla fudge, chocolate fudge or caramel! To add to your experience, we have a fun array of Alaskan gifts and novelties you can purchase around the shop. We enjoy making the finest fudge in Alaska and we take pride in our customer satisfaction.If you're in town or visiting on vacation, we'd love to see you. Feel free to stop by year round, to experience a friendly, family owned, original Fudge Pot.
515 1st Avenue Fairbanks, Alaska 99701(907) 456-3834 :: thefudgepot@hotmail.com
Finally getting tired of working with scraps, I decided I wanted to start a sampler. I looked through the books I own, and then decided, why follow someone else's pattern? I'll just do my own! I have enough reference books.
This block is taken from The Quilter's Album of Patchwork Patterns by Jinny Beyer.
This fall, there will be a new big cheese on campus. Cornell Big Red Cheddar is slated to hit campus eateries and the shelves of The Cornell Store in November.
Cornell Big Red is actually white: a six-month-aged mild cheddar to be packaged in bright red one- and two-pound wheels and sold online and in campus retail outlets such as Cornell Orchards.
It was unveiled at a tasting event April 24 at Morrison Hall, where 30 people sampled three potential formulations and voted on their favorite.
Here, Dennis Miller, professor and chair of food science digs in to a sample.
Read more about it here,
Photo by Jason Koski - University Photo
This one is from the archives; I designed and made it for my son's birth. A friend persuaded me to enter it into a competition run by Woman's Weekly - the brief was to design a sampler for a family celebration. I rather reluctantly sent it off and was very relieved when it came back in the post several weeks later and I thought no more about it. Some time later, to my great surprise, I received a runner up prize!
Dan is very attached to his sampler, he used it to learn the alphabet and it hangs in his flat today.