Celebrate any time with these knit star-shaped coasters. The free knitting pattern includes video tutorials to help beginning knitters.
Indulge in the delicate elegance of this petite shawl, a mesmerizing crochet project crafted into a field of seamlessly merged dogwood-inspired crocheted motifs. Fashioned from sumptuous sock-weight yarn, this airy accessory offers a whisper-light touch, perfect for adorning your shoulders on balmy days. Its dainty allure captures the essence of springtime. The continuous crochet motif method ensures a fluidity of design and minimizes the hassle of weaving in ends. A simple beaded edging enhances the drape of the light-weight yarn. Fully written instructions are supported by in-depth charted instructions and video tutorials. Appropriate for intermediate-level crocheters.
WMAR-TV first began broadcasting on October 27, 1947. It was the eleventh television station in the United States, and the first to sign on in Maryland. It was owned by the A.S. Abell Company, publisher of the Baltimore Sun along with the original WMAR-FM which is now WIYY 97.9 (98 Rock) Baltimore's third television station started on November 2, 1948 FRANK CHAPMAN was the first magician televised in Marlyand ROMPER ROOM with SALLY CLASTER GELBARD PHIL THOMAS' show ran for 6 years and 300 episodes in BALTIMORE. 1962 MISS RHEA & SUNSHINE CHARLIE ECKMAN http://www.charleyeckman.com/ "He's in the Basketball HOF & Broad Casters HOF! The Coach of the Baltimore Bullets & local Baltimore Sports Guy! I loved the way he said Orioles.... "The Earls"!!! " - Kevin D. Kirtley 1967 BOB McCALLISTER on the set of WONDERAMA http://wonderamashow.blogspot.com/ Gary Moore Moore was born Thomas Garrison Morfit, III on January 31, 1915, in Baltimore, Maryland, the son of Mason P. Morfit and Mary L. (née Harris) Morfit.He attended Baltimore City College, but dropped out to pursue a career in radio and writing. Starting in 1937, he worked for Baltimore radio station WBAL as an announcer, writer, and actor/comedian http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garry_Moore RHEA FELKIN NANCY CLASTER on ROMPER ROOM 1953 NANCY CLASTER first host of ROMPER ROOM The first Romper Room hostess was Nancy Claster, who helped produce the series with her husband under the Claster Television banner. Miss Nancy hosted the show, produced at the studios of WBAL-TV in Baltimore, Maryland, from the first episode in 1953 until 1963, when she was replaced by her daughter Sally Claster Gelbard. Miss Sally hosted the show, in Baltimore and the surrounding area, until 1981 when it was retitled... AL SANDERS http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Sanders RICHARD SHER & OPRAH WINFREY ON WJZTV 13 "PEOPLE ARE TALKING" JERRY TURNER http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Turner_%28anchorman%29 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9-nYYpfIVs ROYAL PARKER http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Parker CAPT. CHESAPEAKE (GEORGE A. LEWIS) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captain_Chesapeake "HELLO CREWMEMBERS!" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgO_GR7UtQ8 TIME FOR PLAN 9 FROM OUTER SPACE! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm5scFTS0pw GHOST HOST THEATER http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LHAv7KZKmVA PROFESSOR KOOL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stu_Kerr STU KERR as PROFESSOR KOOL http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stu_Kerr
Art is definitely a limitless discipline. We can find small slices of it everywhere in almost all things. Visual ...
Are there viable alternatives that allows the average crocheter to create crochet stitch charts? Yes and no, but mostly "not yet".
Artist Alex Eckman-Lawn started drawing comic books as a kid, he taught himself to draw from the pages of one of those How to Draw Marvel Superheroes books his old man photocopied at the local library. He was good, he was smart, he had talent. Born in Philadelphia, his parents met at a seminary and were once religious. For a time, Eckman-Lawn attended a Quaker school but “that shit bugged me out because I thought it was so creepy—people all chanting and stuff together is fucking weird—and also powerful in a way.” So a lot of my work is trying to get that feeling—that weird mysterious feeling, like you’re almost scared and intimidated. It’s something bigger than just sitting there in a room with people, but also sort of fun. Eckman-Lawn is known for his graphic and comic books (the Eisner Award winning Little Nemo: Dream Another Dream, Awakening volumes one and two, and Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard among others); his many designs for album covers by bands like Psyopus, Architect, Yakuza, Maruta, Krieg, Nero Di Marte, Hacride, Nesseria, and many more; and for his strange and disturbing collage artworks. He describes...
Most artists approach paper as a two-dimensional surface upon which to draw or paint. Others see it in an entirely different way, using it as an architectural material for the most unexpected of three-dimensional works. From wispy, dynamic cut-outs hovering in the air to replicas of entire cities, the works of these 14 (more!) paper
It has oft been said that the final stage of a work of art is not in the artist's finishing of the piece but in the moment that it is viewed on the wall of a gallery or museum. Where the outsider takes the image into their mind and digs into it, or rather, allows it to dig into them. When this relationship is at its most successful there is a bond created, built through connection and deepened through mystery. We become curious; longing for answers as to why this particular piece speaks to us, what the intention of the artist was, and what lies behind the layers. And this is the magic of Alex Eckman-Lawn's work. It takes us into those layers. We are welcomed into the bowels of an image, through exquisitely cut
Shibori is a Japanese resist-dyeing technique, creating pattern by preventing dye from reaching all parts of the cloth I tried it as part of my National Craft Month experimentation.
Allen and Patty Ecman create detailed cast paper sculptures using a special technique they call the Eckman Method
Here’s a handy-dandy online calculator to help you figure out how many stitches you’ll need to get a particular width while matching a stitch multiple. What You’ll Need to Know Your stitch gauge in stitches per inch, or stitches per 4″, or stitches per 10 cm, or some other width How wide you want your… Read More »Online Stitch Multiple Calculator for Knitting & Crochet
Artist Alex Eckman-Lawn started drawing comic books as a kid, he taught himself to draw from the pages of one of those How to Draw Marvel Superheroes books his old man photocopied at the local library. He was good, he was smart, he had talent. Born in Philadelphia, his parents met at a seminary and were once religious. For a time, Eckman-Lawn attended a Quaker school but “that shit bugged me out because I thought it was so creepy—people all chanting and stuff together is fucking weird—and also powerful in a way.” So a lot of my work is trying to get that feeling—that weird mysterious feeling, like you’re almost scared and intimidated. It’s something bigger than just sitting there in a room with people, but also sort of fun. Eckman-Lawn is known for his graphic and comic books (the Eisner Award winning Little Nemo: Dream Another Dream, Awakening volumes one and two, and Mouse Guard: Legends of the Guard among others); his many designs for album covers by bands like Psyopus, Architect, Yakuza, Maruta, Krieg, Nero Di Marte, Hacride, Nesseria, and many more; and for his strange and disturbing collage artworks. He describes...