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Turimetta Beach
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Here is my shaped card!!!! (Originally created for the 2peas 'Don't be Square' challenge)...
The background in white is the HA stamp 'Stars and Swirls' that I rec'd from Jacqueline in a RAK! I LOVE THIS STAMP!!!! It's a 2004 version...
Other supplies:
Stamps: CHF (tree); SU (circles and sentiment);
MM patterned paper (tree)
SU patterned paper (ground)
Buttons: Basic Grey and Autumn Leaves.
The scallop card shape is a SU die cut!!!
The crescent moon was a 'pleasant mistake'... I was punching out my stamped circles, and said 'what if'!!!
Thanks for looking!
It all started out by playing around with all these different slopes and curved slopes; see the prototype.
It ended with this big, retro, roadster, sports car monster.
The sunken topiary chess garden at Haseley Court is one of the most iconic gardens in Britain. Photographs of it appeared in many books about 20 years ago and then it disappeared from public view. Until now!
The garden was originally planted up in 1850 though the chessmen were not clipped into shape until 1900. The whole ‘board’ is bordered by dark yew columns and domes of Portugal laurel - the laurels are relatively new since the originals were killed off by honey fungus. The chessmen are of box apart from the four rooks or castles which are of yew. One knight seems to have been lost (or captured!) since the last published photographs were taken.
Haseley Court was in decline in the 1920s and 1930s and during WWII it was used as a POW camp and as a field hospital for Canadians. The topiary survived only because a villager from nearby Great Haseley used to cycle over once a year to keep his ‘kings and queens’ in shape.
Now fully mature and in superb condition, this garden represents one of the pinnacles of British gardening. I was a privileged visitor since it is never open to the public.
In these busy days before Christmas, I like to make simple vegetable dishes in my favourite cast-iron pot. I put whatever I have in the fridge with a little olive oil and some sea salt and herbs and my vegetables simmer slowly, deliciously filling my kitchen with comforting smells as I go about my occupations!
Taking time to enjoy the colours and shapes and textures of my vegetables as I add them to the pot.
My picture shows shape creating the principle of pattern and contrast. The pattern is created by repeating lines of bricks. The contrast is created by the organic shapes of the leaves and weeds with the geometric shapes of the bricks. The process of me taking this photo was taking pictures around this canal area in England. I found a spot where the bricks were coming out of the ground were buses couldn’t go, and saw that there were plants growing out of it as well. Then I laid on the ground and got different angles of the lines of bricks. What I thought I could do better on was taking pictures on a day with better lighting. What I thought I did good on was getting a variety of pictures.
I took the easy way out when making my first card for the shapes challenge ... using the labels two nestability to cut out the shape ;-)
I folded the paper and placed the nestability die just a little outside the fold - to make the card hold itself together. It accidently left a little hole - but as it turned out I could use that for the ribbon ;)
The new wallpaper flowers stamp kind of lead me to this design. Lovely stamp for coloring, I think.
Supplies:
HA K5158 Wallpaper Flowers, HA K5107 Screen Shadow, HA Messages.
Bo Bunny paper, white cs, flowers, HA pearls, button, twine and Bo Bunny ribbon.
Spellbinders labels Two nestability.
I was considering a suitable photo with a shapes theme while walking down Camden High St when I remembered the new protection barriers that had recently been installed.
The pairs of oval blocks either side, I thought were quite like sculptures, so I experimented taking photos of them from different directions.
The one that seemed the come out best was a close up of the shaped blocks with the crowded road leading up to the canal bridge in the background and a police car just coming round the corner.