Experiencias en el aula de Infantil y Materiales para compartir.
It's fun and easy to make art out of paint chips or swatches! For a recent Home Show, I made a paint mannequin from a dress form and several paint decks!
abrigo para galgo ropa-para-galgo jersey de punto para galgo jersey para galgo jersey a medida para galgo
Welcome to my moods were I translate my current mood into color and inspiration for that next big project. I hope you too find inspiration for your next project. There are over 100 to choose from. …
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Prepossessing, pleasant and cute composition. Unpretentious, calm shades create the atmosphere of cosines and relaxation. Shades of brown and light firebrick wonderfully match with grey-light blue and subdued emerald. These natural colors are perfect to be used while creating home interior.
Rich blueberry shades will look good and contrasting against the background of relatively bright green. This color solution will fit perfectly into a well-lit living room.
Frontispiece. Primary object lessons, for training the senses and developing the faculties of children. 1885.
Each girl in an outfit that combines the soft pastel colors of this palette will feel like a princess. And maybe in Spring itself - tender and eternally young. Green and scarlet, pink and blue are the best colors for meeting spring. However, designers notice: if a girl's figure is not ideal, the scarlet color can draw attention to her shortcomings. It is better to leave it for accessories, giving the leading role to pink or beige - no less
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I know we are not alone on this issue. When it comes to designing a bedroom, (or any room for that matter), the age-old argument of what's too manly or to girli
Madder dyeing experiments. Mostly for Viking Age Re-enactment (my hobby on weekends). These were just sample bits tossed in with a friend's very very organized dye sampling to achieve a specific shade of red made by the Dutch and/or Flemish people in the Late Medieval period. A couple of the dyes/mordant combinations can't be traced back far enough for me to use for Viking Age clothing and textiles, but I'm completely in love with the Brazilwood/Madder combination, especially on the wool. Sadly, I'm a little leery of using it over-much as Brazilwood is an endangered species of tree, even though Maiwa, my main source for dyes, uses only reclaimed wood for their brazilwood dye. I think I need to try cochineal/madder, see what that does. Unfortunately, I hadn't really thought through how things were going to be dyed. Normally, at home when sampling, I use a large canning pot with the rack in upside down, and put each of the dye liquors in separate mason jars* with all the wee pieces of sample fabric floating freely inside, and fill the pot until it covers the jars up to about 2/3. I can do 6 sample lots at a time, 9 if I don't mind putting 3 in the centre where they could get hotter than the other 6. *Leave the lids off. But since the dyeing was being done in large pots (which was kind of the point, seeing as how we were sampling how a couple different pots affect the dyes) I couldn't really do that. Some of the samples were only about 2 inches square and gauzy, and I was afraid they'd get lost, so they got stuffed in stockings my friend was kind enough to give me, which really isn't the best idea. My samples are kinda spotty. Next time, I sew a cord through the corners and spread them out like charms on a bracelet, if I'm sampling in larger pots. Most of the samples are still useful. There's only one I didn't bother putting in; it had gotten rolled up inside a couple other samples and didn't really get any dye at all. And one skein of silk was also rolled in with it and only got dye in patches. Oh well. I learned a bunch and got some cool samples, so I'm happy. My handwoven wool came out beautifully. The silk is definitely more finicky about being free-floating than the wool. Brazilwood seems to discharge indigo. Seriously! When I untied the knot holding the wool thread samples together, the only reason I knew which was which was from the way I'd tied them in. If I'd had to guess, I would have guessed wrong, the straight madder/brazilwood was DARKER than the overdyed thread, and the pale bit where the overdyed piece had been tied in showed no sign of blue! Cottons. Yes I know, if I want reds on cellulose fibres I need to use tannins. I have, though, in the past, and still got pinks. I'm trying to find out what tannin sources (that don't dye the fibres themselves) were used in the Viking Age, but haven't stumbled across that info yet. Not that I've been looking hard either! Linen. I love the pinks from the Madder/Brazilwood. Tin makes the linen too orange for my tastes, though my friend thinks the tinning in the pot dissolved and the orange may be a reaction from the metal the pot is made of, possibly cheap aluminium. The Madder and Madder in Copper are both quite pretty. Silk is spotty. Madder and madder-in-copper are actually pretty much the same colour. The madder-in-tin is definitively orange. The madder/brazilwood is strangely weak on the silk. The madder-in-tin was less orange on the wool than the silk, though still definitely orange leaning red. The madder and madder-in-copper were similar again. On the fabrics the madder-in-copper was slightly bluer-tinged, but the madder dyed the threads darker than madder-in-copper.I'm tempted to try some of my left-over sample packets in a cool madder vat, and one with pieces of copper in it, see if it turns out any redder. The madder/brazilwood is just gorgeous. The picture doesn't do it justice. The Madder/Indigo overdyes. The threads were dyed with indigo first, mostly because it's leftovers from another project, but dyeing first with indigo is apparently recommended anyway, especially with a chemical vat, since at least one of the chemicals is a bleaching agent.
This combination is like a delicate breath of spring. Harmonious duet of rich red and royal pink colours superbly convey a romantic mood. Soft shade of light green and white harmoniously complete selection of colours. This palette is appropriate in interior design of girl's nursery, bedroom or living room. Wardrobe of fashionista composed in such palette will be incredibly romantic.
Well, I won't bore you with the snowy-cold news here! It's been a blistering -13 today. Which means shovelling out the driveway multiple times, sidewalks, trips to help others, no Ball State and no work fur the hubs or Jon! Lost of hot chocolate being consumed here in between times outside! This is my dream cup of hot chocolate! Served at a sewing retreat where all my quiltey and bloggy friends are! Sigh! Last week I finished up my Winter table topper Very happy! Very pleased! Inspired by this picture on Pinterest This week while surfing, I came across this and fell in love! Sort of. Kind of. How about another spasm of inspiration? I really like the color...but not much orange happening here. I love the heart centered with the bow...no heart locket, tons of snow, no travelling and the prototype fabric heart I tried, well, didn't work out in the long haul I'm a-frayed. Twiddle thumbs. Take a drink. Walk around. Look out the windows. Surf Pinterest again. Come back to the same, original picture that caught my eye. Ok. Into my tote of vintage linens. Maybe something will connect with me there. I find this basket of posies. Very Springy, happy, colorful and smallish. I cut it to a square 6 1/2". The Pinterest picture has a scrappy border that makes me smile. Now off to the scraps totes and buckets. I decide on only one border of scraps all the way around (instead of two at the top and bottom...but maybe I'll change my mind when I go back to it later today). And now I have this I'm beaming! What a bright, cheerful, pick me up on a cold winter's day! In the original inspiration, there is quilting on the paper behind the locket. I took out my ruler and my Pilot Frixion pen and mark quilting lines 1" apart on both diagonals. And here is where I am starting the day off. I'm not much of a hand quilter, so I marked 1/4" dashes and tried to sew straight. LOL Do you think it looks like paper toweling too? (shaking my head...I need caffeine!) Not sure where it will end up. But I'm pretty happy. It looks nothing like my inspiration piece, but that's the fun of it! Taking something, adjusting here and there, changing this, replacing that and making it truly YOUR own! Hope you're staying warm and safe wherever you are today! Come be inspired! i have to say freshly pieced and crazy mom quilts you can follow me here
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Hallo allemaal, Misschien kennen jullie het al wel, maar bij Noor! Design hebben we ook een Facebook groep met Pocketletters. Dit zijn...
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Savoir combiner correctement les couleurs est l'un des secrets pour obtenir des tenues vraiment originales et stylées au moment de t'habiller. Sympa-sympa.com a donc décidé de partager avec toi ces secrets. Désormais, tu auras pleins d'options à ta disposition pour choisir la combinaison de couleurs de tes vêtements tranquillement et sans avoir peur de faire des fautes de goût.
Hola a todo@s!! Ya sé que estoy un poco desaparecida del blog ,pero las circunstancias cambian y ahora tengo menos tiempo para hacer patrones de amigurumis.Pero intentare hacer aunque sea uno por mes. Hoy te comparto unos patrones o gráficos de unas puntillas o cenefas ,que puedes utilizar para varias labores diferentes .Espero que estos patrones te ayuden en tu próximo proyecto !!. Están sacados de internet de diferentes sitios (NO son mios) Ya sabes que también me puedes seguir en twitter , facebook ,google + e instagram . En mi blog Solgurumis estoy compartiendo ,estos días ,patrones navideños!!! Te dejo el enlace para que le heches un vistazo haz clic aquí
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Hello there everyone! Laurel Beard here today bringing you our next Pin-Sights Challenge!! Before I get on with today's inspirational photo and challenge, please join me in congratulating KimberlyRae and Marlena M. (we have two winners this month due to...
1. Marcamos los moldes sobre cartulina de colores y los recortamos. Las páginas de la Biblia las fotocopiamos o imprimimos tantas veces como vayamos a necesitar y las recortamos por el borde. 2. Dibujamos o coloreamos (según el caso) con marcadores de colores cada pieza (páginas de la Biblia, Espíritu Santo) 3. Pegamos las páginas de la Biblia sobre la tapa, dejando espacio a los costados y abajo. 4. Cuando la Biblia esté bien seca, la doblamos por la mitad. Si vamos a escribir algo, lo hacemos antes de doblarla. 5. Hacemos los cortes en las alas del Espíritu Santo (ver molde) y lo insertamos arriba. Moldes Manualidad: Construimos una tarjeta en forma de Biblia: 1. Marcamos con lápiz los moldes sobre cartulina y los recortamos. 2. Pegamos las hojas en la parte inferior de la Biblia (dejar un borde). Dibujamos las líneas de las hojas con marcador naranja. 3. Cortamos una tira de cartulina de color verde para el señalador y lo pegamos sobre las hojas. Si es necesario, cortamos el excedente de cartulina en diagonal. 4. Terminamos de dibujar la tapa de la Biblia con los marcadores de colores. Moldes Manualidad: Construimos una tarjeta de un niño leyendo la Biblia: Manualidad: Construimos una tarjeta en forma de Biblia: Colorea dibujos relacionados con la Biblia: Tarjeta con Biblia abierta Podemos utilizarla como tarjeta o ampliar los moldes para realizar la biblia en un afiche. Qué necesitamos... Cartulina de colores (base de la tarjeta, flor, tapa de la biblia y señalador), hojas de fotocopia blancas (para las páginas de la biblia), marcador negro para pintar los redondeles del centro de la flor, tijeras, tijera fantasía (para recortar la flor), pegamento. Cómo lo hacemos... 1. Marcar sobre la cartulina los moldes y recortarlos... 2. Marcar sobre hoja blanca el molde de la página. Podemos poner cuantas páginas deseemos. En este caso son 3, dobladas por el medio y pegadas por el centro a la tapa de la biblia. NOTA: Para que queden centradas las hojas conviene doblar antes la tapa de la biblia e ir pegando una por una las hojas (una encima de otra). El señalador va pegado en la última hoja. 3. Realizamos la flor y pegamos todo el conjunto sobre la base de la tarjeta. MOLDES Si lo deseas pueden escribir un mensaje corto en las páginas. Fuente: elrincondelasmelli
Flowers are the best. It’s been a gray, cold, and rainy week, so I decided it was time to make some more beautiful flower inspired color palettes. I hope they brighten your week.
Los tonos suaves y agradables de colores celeste y rosado pueden ser elegidos para decorar tanto una habitación infantil como una mesa para la cena de Pascua.
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An appropriate color scheme for decoration of premises for a wedding day. Delicate pastel shades accentuated by brown and orange look fresh. This color scheme can be applied in the bridal outfit, bouquet and manicure. The palette will be appropriate in summer dresses of romantic women.
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