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24"x36" Artwork by Sherrie Thai of Shaire Productions
This fine art piece was created by hand. The dragon was illustrated on black paper with gold inks and metallic paints. This was then cut out and pasted onto japanese handmade paper, making it a simple collage.
Ivory buttercream with pearl airbrushed icing on square and round tiers, with ornate piping (inspired by the invitation font), metallic-champagne painted sugar bow and jewel brooch.
Clients: Sally and Darren
Flavors: Black Tie and Valencia
Venue: Green Valley Country Club - Fairfield, CA
The arrogant look in her eye is not imaginary. She has a pair of golden dwemer wings, and she's cooler than you.
Why is she naked in the middle of Whiterun? Are those piercings even lore friendly? Hell if I know. Who cares.
_
Jesus, this pretty dunmer was never even supposed to be a vampire, but when the possibility showed itself, I couldn't say no. I've never tried it before, and it's actually pretty amusing. The thing that hooked me though, was the eyes. Gotta love that glowy shit.
Anyways, say hi to Veymara, a young dunmer... archaeologist? Scientist? Who knows. You'll see a lot more of her soon, so don't worry.
The Dead Sea Scrolls consist of roughly 1,000 documents, including texts from the Hebrew Bible, discovered between 1947 and 1979 in eleven caves in and around the Wadi Qumran (near the ruins of the ancient settlement of Khirbet Qumran, on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea) in Israel. The texts are of great religious and historical significance, as they include practically the only known surviving copies of Biblical documents made before 100 AD, and preserve evidence of considerable diversity of belief and practice within late Second Temple Judaism.
Having a glum day. Reminded myself that I can do this: www.youtube.com/watch?v=LU_QR_FTt3E (albeit much slower).
Still glum, but better.
Three tier buttercream wedding cake with offset tiers. Decorated with pearl dragees and dainty scrollwork. Adorned with fresh flowers.
Writhing wooden scroll work in Redland Chapel. Beautifully done too, not your average stuff. This fragment caught my attention. I think it was because it had been broken at some time. It appeals to me taht there has been damage, but things have always been put right in teh end.
Lots of apoxie, it makes the bow slightly heavier but I'll be sanding a fair bit off to get rid of the lumpiness anyway.
A 13-year-old boy reads from a Torah parchment scroll at the rehearsal for his bar mitzvah ceremony. His grandmother's hand is on one side of the scroll, and his grandfather's is on the other, representing the passing on of Jewish tradition from generation to generation. This photo shows his reading of a passage from the Torah called Kedoshim, or "Holiness."
I have 243 "keepers" from the three days of this boy's bar mitzvah, but I won't be sharing most of them on Flickr. I'm sharing this one on Flickr because it doesn't show anyone's face and because it's one of my favorites.
Some of my Flickr friends might be wondering why I haven't posted many photos lately. In addition to photographing a bar mitzvah three days last weekend, I have been translating Richard III into ASL with an interpreting partner and rehearsing our interpretation for the ASL interpreted performance. I have also been busy with preparing ASL interpreting workshops for a region and a national conference in June.