View allAll Photos Tagged sashes

and the Scrappy Swoon quilt top will be ready for sandwiching, basting and quilting.

 

thequiltingdee.blogspot.com/

It measures just 1/4 inch across, and is made of metallic yarns. Since it is twisted and has many curves - I thought it might do for this weeks Macro Mondays theme. HMM Everyone!

Lens: Pergear 35mm 1:1.2; f/1.2

Tarra Bulga National Park,

Victoria, Australia.

 

OMD EM5.2

converted to

720nm IR

a belt/sash i made, inspired by one in a noa noa catalogue.

linen and cotton yo-yos hand-sewn to a backing piece of fabric.

cotton crochet ribbon attached.

I find this slightly unsettling for some reason...

Rendered with POV-Ray 3.7

day two

 

busybusy day.

tryouts, babysitting, errands.

i didn't get home until after dark.

so i tried to take some night shots.

FAIL.

i desperately wanted to cheat. even though its only my second day.

but i won't.

the horrendous picture i took today is in comments. its awful. really.

With ornate pillars and lamps.

 

LDD and POV-Ray.

New for Geeks and Nerds event opening on the 24th November

4", 6", 8", 10" dummy covered in fondant with fondant sash and bows. The rose buds are gumpaste and the brooches are real. Thanks for looking!

For the Macro Monday theme "Clothing" (January 27th 2014)

Brightly coloured, silky, woven with gold thread; I used to wear it as a sash, though I'm not sure exactly what it is! Full shot in the first comment field. I can't find a picture like it online, so if you know what it is, I'd be delighted to find out ;o)

Shot with the Sony NEX-6 using the E30mm F3.5 macro lens

 

My 2014 Macro Mondays set: 2014 Macro Mondays

Trying to decide between thin sashing with the charcoal like this, or thick sashing as in the previous pic.

Sliding sash window in abandoned Irish house, not loved

IView On BlackI

 

HaPPY FLoWeRY THuRSDaY !!!

  

The last day of Songkran festival is here.

 

Thailand is wet and ready for a new year.

   

This man here is working on the Erawan Shrine in Bangkok.

 

The most important shrine for the thais and you can believe me, tons of flowers, candles and incense sticks are laid down all day by the thai Buddhists, coming to this place to pray for good business and success.

 

So this man is doing an important job, he grabs all flowers and the other stuff and making space for new ones.

 

I like the hand of him, I catched in this shot.

  

HaPPY GoRGeouS GReeN THuRSDaY all of you !!!

    

Look here for more information about the eRaWaN SHRiNe.

   

Miss me……..

♪♪♫ L I S T e N ♪♪♫♪♪♫

 

 

Carissa's Echino log cabin quilt is ready to be sashed . . . (we're going to be quilt twinses!). my quilt will probably have muslin sashing, because, clearly i am not as daring as Carissa, who wants a bolder, more colorful quilt. the fuchsia sashing is quickly growing on me though! i may try out a colored sashing yet!

nachdem der Nikolaus alle Geschenke bei SaSH abgeladen hatte, war er ganz platt.

 

Happy birthday, dear SaSH! www.flickr.com/photos/insashi/

 

View large on black

       

Details best viewed in Original Size.

 

Perseus with the Head of Medusa is a bronze sculpture made by Benvenuto Cellini in the period 1545-1554. The sculpture stands upon a square base with bronze relief panels (a copy) depicting the story of Perseus and Andromeda, similar to a predella on an altarpiece. It is located in the Loggia dei Lanzi of the Piazza della Signoria in Florence, Italy. The second Florentine duke, Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici, commissioned the work with specific political connections to the other sculptural works in the piazza. When the piece was revealed to the public on 27 April 1554, Michelangelo’s David, Bandinelli’s Hercules and Cacus, and Donatello’s Judith and Holofernes were already erected in the piazza. The subject matter of the work is the mythological story of Perseus beheading Medusa, a hideous woman-faced Gorgon whose hair was turned to snakes and anyone that looked at her was turned to stone. Perseus stands naked except for a sash (engraved with sculptor's name) and winged sandals, triumphant on top of the body of Medusa with her snakey head in his raised hand. The body of Medusa spews blood from her severed neck. The bronze sculpture and Medusa’s head turns men to stone and is appropriately surrounded by three huge marble statues of men: Hercules, David, and later Neptune. Cellini breathed new life into the piazza visitor through his new use of bronze in Perseus and the head of Medusa and the motifs he used to respond to the previous sculpture in the piazza. If one examines the sculpture from the back, you can see the self-image of the sculptor Cellini on the backside of Perseus' helmet. The sculpture is thought to be the first statue since the classical age where the base included a figurative sculpture forming an integral part of the work.

Info above was extracted from Wikipedia.

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