Tumblr Blog
Introducing Our Celestial Art Deco Rug: Where Elegance Meets the Cosmos, Perfect for Both Indoor and Outdoor Spaces! Elevate your indoor and outdoor living spaces with our Celestial Art Deco Rug, a captivating fusion of classic Art Deco aesthetics and contemporary durability. Set against a rich backdrop of moon and stars, this rug weaves a celestial narrative with a mysterious woman figure at its center, creating a visually stunning piece designed to grace your home or outdoor sanctuary. The rug's design is a captivating blend of the celestial and the enigmatic. A resplendent moon and stars command attention, casting their glow upon a woman figure whose back is turned to the center, shrouded in an air of mystery. This intricate scene captures the essence of a starry night and the allure of an Art Deco masterpiece. Designed with both aesthetics and practicality in mind, our Celestial Art Deco Rug features a non-skid polyester backing, ensuring it stays securely in place, whether placed in a bustling indoor setting or exposed to the elements outdoors. Durability is woven into the very fabric of this rug. It's meticulously crafted to withstand the demands of both indoor and outdoor use, promising longevity and retaining its captivating allure season after season. Comfort and convenience are integral to our design. The rug's breathable construction ensures a comfortable underfoot feel, enhancing the overall experience, whether you're walking across it indoors or relaxing on your patio. Plus, with its rapid-drying capabilities, it effortlessly handles outdoor challenges, from unexpected rain showers to accidental spills. Elevate your decor to new heights of celestial elegance with our Celestial Art Deco Rug. Whether you're seeking to create an inviting indoor ambiance, an outdoor stargazing haven, or simply want to infuse your spaces with the timeless allure of the night sky, this rug promises to be the focal point of admiration. .: Material: 100% polyester chenille front .: Hemmed edges .: One Size Only 60"x84" (152cm x 213cm) .: ---Bigger sizes are available upon request--- .: No skid polyester backing .: Thickness: 0.25'' (6mm) ------Attention------ ----This is a Flatweave Rug ( Low pile rug with 0.25" thickness )----
Guerilla knitting, yarnbombs, offcuts, crochet & pretty knits
STRETCHED CANVAS ART REPRODUCTION GICLEE - Museum quality reproduction, would make a great addition to any home, office or restaurant decor! Painting: (1879) The Birth of Venus, Oil on Canvas - Located at the he Musée d'Orsay is a museum in Paris, France Artist: Artist: William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825 – 1905) was a French academic painter and traditionalist. MASTERPIECE WORKS OF ART REPRODUCED TO MUSEUM QUALITY PAINTINGS ARE PRINTED ON HEAVYWEIGHT PROFESSIONAL CANVAS USING "GICLEE" TECHNIQUE WITH A PROFESSIONAL VARNISH COATING STRETCHED CANVAS EDGE OPTION FINISHES – Please choose an option you would like when ordering “IMAGES ABOVE” WHITE EDGE OPTION - Image is only on the face of the Canvas. Sides of Canvas are White. BLACK EDGE OPTION - Image is only on the face of the Canvas. Sides of Canvas are Black. MIRRORED EDGE OPTION - The sides of the submitted image are mirrored to seamlessly cover the sides of the Canvas. CANVAS - (410g/m2, heavyweight bright white acid-free cotton) PROFESSIONAL VARNISH COATING “MATTE FINISH” - (provides an additional layer of protection, more contrast, and a more pronounced "canvas" texture) STRETCHED FRAMED CANVAS - (lightweight and premium grade 1.5" thick wood, with ready to hang wire and felt pads) DIFFERENT SIZES AVAILABLE - CLICK ON SIZE TAB TO MAKE YOUR SELECTION - (ABOVE QUANTITY TAB) Stretched Canvas Size - 17" by 24" - $106.99 with Free Shipping Stretched Canvas Size - 20" by 28" - $124.99 with Free Shipping Other Sizes Available - (if you have another size in mind, contact us, and we'll give you the details) DETAILS Printed with vivera pigmented inks, designed to create vibrant color images that resist fading. Designed to meet galleries and museum longevity requirements and ensure consistency of shades 200 years old. GICLEE ART This giclée print delivers a vivid image with maximum color accuracy and exceptional resolution. The standard for museums and galleries around the world, giclée is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are "sprayed" onto high-quality surface. With the great degree of detail and smooth transitions of color gradients, giclée prints appear much more realistic than other reproduction prints. SHIPPING - FULLY INSURED All Stretched Canvas Paintings are Made to Order. Handling time 4 to 6 BUSINESS DAYS before Shipping USA - Expedited Parcel - FREE SHIPPING Canada - Expedited Parcel - FREE SHIPPING 100% SATISFACTION GUARANTEE - MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
Trapeze, Aerial silks, and Cloudswing are acts in where the artist is suspended above the stage or the audience. They require rigging to safely perform.
If who we are is where creature meets context, then the way that we’re made is by hand. Articulate extensions of perception, our hands bring ideas to life. They’re how we engage with the world around us, make meaning, gather sense, transmit love. ARTWORK DETAILS: All of my photos are carefully crafted works of fine art. They reflect my commitment to aesthetic excellence and emerge from my devotion to sharing humanity’s truth. Each photo represents days of meticulous planning, weeks of painstaking refinement, and years of my artistic growth. Fine art paper print from original photograph by Olga Prudka. Print comes UNFRAMED. PAPER TYPE: Museum-quality posters made on thick and durable matte paper. Each poster is giclée-printed on archival, acid-free paper that yields brilliant prints to brighten up any room. PAPER THICKNESS: 10.3 mil (0.26 mm) PAPER WEIGHT: 5.57 oz/yd² (189 g/m²) Blank product sourced from Japan PRINTS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING SIZES: - 8 x 10 inches (20.32 x 25.4 cm) - 12 x 16 inches ( 30 x 40 cm) - 16 x 20 inches (40.64 x 50.8 cm) - 16 x 24 inches (40.64 x 60.96 cm) - custom sizes available SHIPPING: - Prints ship WORLDWIDE. - Each print is mailed in a sturdy mailing tube. - Prints are made and shipped from New York. RETURNS: - Returns only accepted for orders damaged during shipping. - If an order is damaged during shipping we will happily send a replacement. - Please measure your space carefully before ordering. CUSTOM SIZES AVAILABLE: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1023815906/select-any-print-any-size-custom-print?ref=shop_home_active_1 PLEASE CHECK OUT OUR OTHER LISTINGS HERE: https://www.etsy.com/shop/OlgaPrudkaArt?ref=simple-shop-header-name&listing_id=1017428194 https://www.olgaprudka.com https://www.instagram.com/olgaprudka/ If you have any questions regarding commercial use, please do not hesitate to reach out. PLEASE MESSAGE US WITH ANY QUESTIONS YOU HAVE AND THANK YOU FOR YOUR INTEREST! © All images are copyrighted and owned by Olga Prudka LLC.
Curl up in a piece of romantic artistry with the 'Hellelil and Hildebrand, the Meeting on the Turret Stairs' Fleece Sherpa Throw/Blanket, inspired by Frederic William Burton's 1864 masterpiece. This blanket is a luxurious homage to Burton's portrayal of a poignant love story, rendered in soft 100% polyester fleece that offers the cozy warmth of wool with a gentle touch. The tender moment captured between Hellelil and Hildebrand is beautifully reproduced, inviting the drama and emotion of the pre-Raphaelite era into your home. Care for this piece of art is as simple as its beauty: machine wash in cool water and tumble dry on a low setting. No need for bleaching, ironing, or dry-cleaning. Wrap yourself in the historic romance of this fleece sherpa throw, where every fold tells a story. Choose from four cozy sizes: Medium Blanket - (100 x 75cm) Throw Blanket - (150 x 100cm) Queen Blanket - (125 x 150cm) King Blanket - (150 x 200cm) Have questions? Send a message for a swift response!
About Illustration for Look magazine, 1940's. Bride and Groom Signed Lower right. As a youngster, William Andrew Loomis loved to draw pictures, but it was a visit to the nearby studio of Howard Chandler Christy that made him decide to seek for himself an artist’s career. Loomis was born in Syracuse, New York, and grew up in Zanesville, Ohio. At 19, he went to New York to attend the Art Students League, where he studied under George Bridgman and Frank Vincent DuMond. In 1915, he got a job in Chicago with the art organization of the Charles Daniel Frey; he also attended classes at the Chicago Art Institute. This was interrupted in 1917 when he enlisted in the Army and served 20 months, half of them in France. After the war, Loomis returned to Chicago to work at the Charles Everett Johnson advertising art studio, then for Bertch and Cooper. He finally opened his own studio as a free-lance artist. Equally at home in either editorial or advertising illustration, Loomis had a long career in both and also painted many twenty-four-sheet poster advertisements. This broad experience especially qualified him as a teacher at the American Academy of Art in Chicago. Countless other art students who could not study with him personally benefited from his several art books, including Fun With a Pencil, Drawing for All It’s Worth, and Creative Illustration, published by The Viking Press. In 1999 Looms was inducted into the Society of Illustrators’ Hall of Fame.
Katie Butler is a visual artist living and working out of her home in Toronto, Canada. Katie works mainly with acrylics to create colourful and moody figurative paintings. Her love for painting was reignited in 2019, when she began offering commission portraits surrounding themes of body positivity. Since then, her work has pivoted towards the portrayal of candid moments. Katie uses her art as a means for storytelling — depicting scenes where the subject becomes the character of a larger narrative, often through the expressive nature of the human form. Pictured here in a size medium.
an ongoing animation and other things - www.engmanhellstrom.com This photo and this text is also my contribution to the latest issue of Idle. "Home Home has been on my agenda lately. I've been kind of lost, floating in space without a home in the way I was used to. I've left the person and the apartment that I called home. This made me "homeless". That was hard but it also gave me a strange feeling of freedom. I could live where ever I chose. I think home is a space not a place - a space where no one should enter without your permission. A space where you could feel relatively secure. Maybe it can be an object, but in that case the object makes a space, in your mind, a space where you feel at ease. Home means a lot to me, it has always done, but maybe in a different way now. I am my home. All I really need could fit in a suitcase or two. At the moment I am working on "Memoire no 1", right now this is my home."
I’ve been a Mary Engelbreit fan since the 1980s when I first found her greeting cards in a local shop. The artwork was incredibly appealing to me and the sentiments were both amusing and charming. Some cards included quotes by famous folk that were thought-provoking and/or inspirational to say the least. I gave ME cards and kept some for me. Soon, there were calendars and mugs and all sorts of merchandise… so when I found out that ME had also designed fabric lines… I just knew I had to make a ME quilt for my Emma. While granddaughter Emma loves stuffed animals and playing with dolls and dressing up, she also enjoys Star Wars, building blocks, dinosaurs and climbing and digging in the sand. When she was younger, she loved playing “No, no, no, no, no!” with me. It started when I stacked blocks in towers for her when we were playing on the floor and laughingly told her “nonononono” when she knocked them over. Emma thought knocking over the block towers was the greatest thing since sliced bread and soon the game expanded to other activities such chasing Grandma around the house while Grandma “ran away” saying “nononono.” I wish I had a recording of Emma’s laughter… how could anyone be down listening to that precious gurgling chuckle? I found a tutorial for making a crazy nine-patch block on Allsorts… I believe it is referred to as a wonky nine-patch as well. I knew it would be perfect for Emma’s quilt. Using a ME layer cake from her “Basket of Flowers” line, I proceeded to learn that following detailed instructions isn’t as easy as one would think. I only messed up one step a bit and to be honest, it’s not all that noticeable in the finished quilt. I see it but no one else has noticed….. yet. Oh, well… I always knew I wasn’t perfect… now there’s a permanent record of it! One thing special about the quilt is that the little girl on the panel on the quilt back reminds me of my darling Emma. Because the colors of Emma’s quilt were so much lighter than the boys’ quilts, the quilt became translucent in the late November sun. I like thinking of my Emma, snuggled under both the flannel rag quilt I made her and her new “Basket of Flowers” quilt… and knowing that she’s safe and warm! ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ Because I am a world-class procrastinator, I will be joining the online FRIDAY NIGHT SEW IN at Handmade by Heidi with Heidi, Bobbi, and their crew! You should join us and make sure I don’t goof off! We’ll all be posting photos on Saturday to prove we actually did some sewing Friday night. This is my first FNSI and I understand there will be a "door" prize!
About Illustration for Look magazine, 1940's. Bride and Groom Signed Lower right. As a youngster, William Andrew Loomis loved to draw pictures, but it was a visit to the nearby studio of Howard Chandler Christy that made him decide to seek for himself an artist’s career. Loomis was born in Syracuse, New York, and grew up in Zanesville, Ohio. At 19, he went to New York to attend the Art Students League, where he studied under George Bridgman and Frank Vincent DuMond. In 1915, he got a job in Chicago with the art organization of the Charles Daniel Frey; he also attended classes at the Chicago Art Institute. This was interrupted in 1917 when he enlisted in the Army and served 20 months, half of them in France. After the war, Loomis returned to Chicago to work at the Charles Everett Johnson advertising art studio, then for Bertch and Cooper. He finally opened his own studio as a free-lance artist. Equally at home in either editorial or advertising illustration, Loomis had a long career in both and also painted many twenty-four-sheet poster advertisements. This broad experience especially qualified him as a teacher at the American Academy of Art in Chicago. Countless other art students who could not study with him personally benefited from his several art books, including Fun With a Pencil, Drawing for All It’s Worth, and Creative Illustration, published by The Viking Press. In 1999 Looms was inducted into the Society of Illustrators’ Hall of Fame.
Explore k.t.agar's 81 photos on Flickr!
Home of the Kabbalah Society which follows the Toledano Tradition dating back to medieval Spain where the three branches of the Abrahamic revelation met in a civilised cosmopolitan atmosphere, not unlike our own epoch. Here the Kabbalah brought together an esoteric fusion of religion and philosophy. In our time we relate its ancient theories and practices to contemporary psychology, science and art. The Kabbalah Society has groups on all five continents and periodically holds conferences and workshops in different countries.
B L A C K F R I D A Y S A L E 🌟 25% off EVERYTHING!🌟 FREE 5x7 PRINT with every purchase over $50 (include your choice in the "notes" box at checkout)🌟 $10 OFF orders over $100 HOLIDAY DEADLINES United States + Canada: Free Shipping (USPS First Class) December 9th 2-day Shipping: December 11th Overnight : December 13th United Kingdom: FREE SHIPPING (Royal Mail First Class): December 12th 2-day day: December 13th Overnight: December 15th Europe: Free Shipping: December 6th. No Expedited Shipping available. International: $8.95 Standard Shipping: December 2nd. No Expedited Shipping available. You Don't Own Me Print. Words: "You Don't Own Me". Artwork: Jeanne Bécu, Comtesse du Barry by François Hubert Drouais, c.1770. This is a Fine Art Print (unframed), far superior quality to a poster printed on card stock! For proof of quality, please look at my feedback and customer photos. SIZE: Please select from the drop down menu Paper Type: Kodak Professional Endura Premier Lustre paper or Fuji Crystal Archive Super Type PDN paper (depending on supply) "LUSTRE" - Closely related to Matte with a slight sheen. It has an archival life of 100+ years. The mild sheen that highlights the color and offers a subtle textured look and a feeling of depth and dimension. It shows great contrast without shine. Message me for a sample photo! It arrives UNMATTED and UNFRAMED. If you're on a mobile device, please use the ZOOM feature to enlarge the picture. **DO YOU WANT A CUSTOM PRINT?** Contact me and I will make your DREAMS come TRUE. Custom Listing : https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/545211492/custom-lyrics-print-art-print-fine-art?ref=listings_manager_grid Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions regarding your order. ++ GIFT ORDERS ++ Please note: Despite the "gift" option, I am not able to include custom gift messages in your package. ++ YOUR 24x36 PRINT ++ (1) Please note, for 24x36 prints the production time might be slightly longer. Please message me for more info. (2) Placements of the text might be slightly different. Message me if you would like to see the layout before ordering. + CUSTOM SIZING + If you would a custom size not available in the drop-down, please message to check availability and price. 𝑺𝑰𝑮𝑵 𝑼𝑷 𝑭𝑶𝑹 𝑴𝒀 𝑵𝑬𝑾𝑺𝑳𝑬𝑻𝑻𝑬𝑹 𝑬𝑿𝑪𝑳𝑼𝑺𝑰𝑽𝑬 𝑪𝑶𝑼𝑷𝑶𝑵 𝑪𝑶𝑫𝑬𝑺!!! LINK BELOW..👇 http://eepurl.com/gxagGL + PRODUCTION TIMES + Prints: 3-5 business days Framed Prints: 1-5 days + ABOUT YOUR FRAME + COLOR: Black, White or Red Oak (see last photo) COMPOSITION: 1/ Alder, semi-hardwood frame, produced from renewable forests. 2. Acrylite front protector. 3. Hardware for hanging MEASUREMENTS: .75” (1.9 cm) DESIGN: Lightweight and easy to hang. —- CONVERTING INCHES TO CENTIMETRES —- 5x7 — 18 x 12.5 cm 8x10 —- 20 x 25 cm 11x14 —- 27.94 x 35 cm 16x20 —- 40.64 x 50.80 cm 18x24 —- 45.78 x 60.96 cm 24x36 —- 60.96 x 91.44 cm Shipping Info USA: Printed and shipped in the USA with USPS First Class CANADA: Printed and shipped from the USA with UPS. UK: Printed and shipped from the UK with Royal Mail First Class. Please message me if you would like to upgrade to tracked shipping. EUROPE: Printed and shipped from the U.K. with Royal Mail First Class. Please message me if you would like to upgrade to tracked shipping. ATTENTION BUYERS FROM EUROPE : Shipments to Europe may qualify for local import duty and/or VAT on entry. You are likely to be contacted by their local courier depot in your country and asked to pay a customs fee. GERMAN BUYERS: ATTENTION buyers from Germany. As of 1 July 2022, I can no longer fulfil orders to Germany. I am not able to comply with the new laws regarding LUCID registration. All orders placed will be cancelled and refunded. I am sorry and hopefully will be able to send orders to you in the future!
an ongoing animation and other things - www.engmanhellstrom.com This photo and this text is also my contribution to the latest issue of Idle. "Home Home has been on my agenda lately. I've been kind of lost, floating in space without a home in the way I was used to. I've left the person and the apartment that I called home. This made me "homeless". That was hard but it also gave me a strange feeling of freedom. I could live where ever I chose. I think home is a space not a place - a space where no one should enter without your permission. A space where you could feel relatively secure. Maybe it can be an object, but in that case the object makes a space, in your mind, a space where you feel at ease. Home means a lot to me, it has always done, but maybe in a different way now. I am my home. All I really need could fit in a suitcase or two. At the moment I am working on "Memoire no 1", right now this is my home."
I’ve been a Mary Engelbreit fan since the 1980s when I first found her greeting cards in a local shop. The artwork was incredibly appealing to me and the sentiments were both amusing and charming. Some cards included quotes by famous folk that were thought-provoking and/or inspirational to say the least. I gave ME cards and kept some for me. Soon, there were calendars and mugs and all sorts of merchandise… so when I found out that ME had also designed fabric lines… I just knew I had to make a ME quilt for my Emma. While granddaughter Emma loves stuffed animals and playing with dolls and dressing up, she also enjoys Star Wars, building blocks, dinosaurs and climbing and digging in the sand. When she was younger, she loved playing “No, no, no, no, no!” with me. It started when I stacked blocks in towers for her when we were playing on the floor and laughingly told her “nonononono” when she knocked them over. Emma thought knocking over the block towers was the greatest thing since sliced bread and soon the game expanded to other activities such chasing Grandma around the house while Grandma “ran away” saying “nononono.” I wish I had a recording of Emma’s laughter… how could anyone be down listening to that precious gurgling chuckle? I found a tutorial for making a crazy nine-patch block on Allsorts… I believe it is referred to as a wonky nine-patch as well. I knew it would be perfect for Emma’s quilt. Using a ME layer cake from her “Basket of Flowers” line, I proceeded to learn that following detailed instructions isn’t as easy as one would think. I only messed up one step a bit and to be honest, it’s not all that noticeable in the finished quilt. I see it but no one else has noticed….. yet. Oh, well… I always knew I wasn’t perfect… now there’s a permanent record of it! One thing special about the quilt is that the little girl on the panel on the quilt back reminds me of my darling Emma. Because the colors of Emma’s quilt were so much lighter than the boys’ quilts, the quilt became translucent in the late November sun. I like thinking of my Emma, snuggled under both the flannel rag quilt I made her and her new “Basket of Flowers” quilt… and knowing that she’s safe and warm! ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ Because I am a world-class procrastinator, I will be joining the online FRIDAY NIGHT SEW IN at Handmade by Heidi with Heidi, Bobbi, and their crew! You should join us and make sure I don’t goof off! We’ll all be posting photos on Saturday to prove we actually did some sewing Friday night. This is my first FNSI and I understand there will be a "door" prize!
About Illustration for Look magazine, 1940's. Bride and Groom Signed Lower right. As a youngster, William Andrew Loomis loved to draw pictures, but it was a visit to the nearby studio of Howard Chandler Christy that made him decide to seek for himself an artist’s career. Loomis was born in Syracuse, New York, and grew up in Zanesville, Ohio. At 19, he went to New York to attend the Art Students League, where he studied under George Bridgman and Frank Vincent DuMond. In 1915, he got a job in Chicago with the art organization of the Charles Daniel Frey; he also attended classes at the Chicago Art Institute. This was interrupted in 1917 when he enlisted in the Army and served 20 months, half of them in France. After the war, Loomis returned to Chicago to work at the Charles Everett Johnson advertising art studio, then for Bertch and Cooper. He finally opened his own studio as a free-lance artist. Equally at home in either editorial or advertising illustration, Loomis had a long career in both and also painted many twenty-four-sheet poster advertisements. This broad experience especially qualified him as a teacher at the American Academy of Art in Chicago. Countless other art students who could not study with him personally benefited from his several art books, including Fun With a Pencil, Drawing for All It’s Worth, and Creative Illustration, published by The Viking Press. In 1999 Looms was inducted into the Society of Illustrators’ Hall of Fame.
Explore Hal Barr's 865 photos on Flickr!
Explore k.t.agar's 81 photos on Flickr!
B L A C K F R I D A Y S A L E 🌟 25% off EVERYTHING!🌟 FREE 5x7 PRINT with every purchase over $50 (include your choice in the "notes" box at checkout)🌟 $10 OFF orders over $100 HOLIDAY DEADLINES United States + Canada: Free Shipping (USPS First Class) December 9th 2-day Shipping: December 11th Overnight : December 13th United Kingdom: FREE SHIPPING (Royal Mail First Class): December 12th 2-day day: December 13th Overnight: December 15th Europe: Free Shipping: December 6th. No Expedited Shipping available. International: $8.95 Standard Shipping: December 2nd. No Expedited Shipping available. You Don't Own Me Print. Words: "You Don't Own Me". Artwork: Jeanne Bécu, Comtesse du Barry by François Hubert Drouais, c.1770. This is a Fine Art Print (unframed), far superior quality to a poster printed on card stock! For proof of quality, please look at my feedback and customer photos. SIZE: Please select from the drop down menu Paper Type: Kodak Professional Endura Premier Lustre paper or Fuji Crystal Archive Super Type PDN paper (depending on supply) "LUSTRE" - Closely related to Matte with a slight sheen. It has an archival life of 100+ years. The mild sheen that highlights the color and offers a subtle textured look and a feeling of depth and dimension. It shows great contrast without shine. Message me for a sample photo! It arrives UNMATTED and UNFRAMED. If you're on a mobile device, please use the ZOOM feature to enlarge the picture. **DO YOU WANT A CUSTOM PRINT?** Contact me and I will make your DREAMS come TRUE. Custom Listing : https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/545211492/custom-lyrics-print-art-print-fine-art?ref=listings_manager_grid Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions regarding your order. ++ GIFT ORDERS ++ Please note: Despite the "gift" option, I am not able to include custom gift messages in your package. ++ YOUR 24x36 PRINT ++ (1) Please note, for 24x36 prints the production time might be slightly longer. Please message me for more info. (2) Placements of the text might be slightly different. Message me if you would like to see the layout before ordering. + CUSTOM SIZING + If you would a custom size not available in the drop-down, please message to check availability and price. 𝑺𝑰𝑮𝑵 𝑼𝑷 𝑭𝑶𝑹 𝑴𝒀 𝑵𝑬𝑾𝑺𝑳𝑬𝑻𝑻𝑬𝑹 𝑬𝑿𝑪𝑳𝑼𝑺𝑰𝑽𝑬 𝑪𝑶𝑼𝑷𝑶𝑵 𝑪𝑶𝑫𝑬𝑺!!! LINK BELOW..👇 http://eepurl.com/gxagGL + PRODUCTION TIMES + Prints: 3-5 business days Framed Prints: 1-5 days + ABOUT YOUR FRAME + COLOR: Black, White or Red Oak (see last photo) COMPOSITION: 1/ Alder, semi-hardwood frame, produced from renewable forests. 2. Acrylite front protector. 3. Hardware for hanging MEASUREMENTS: .75” (1.9 cm) DESIGN: Lightweight and easy to hang. —- CONVERTING INCHES TO CENTIMETRES —- 5x7 — 18 x 12.5 cm 8x10 —- 20 x 25 cm 11x14 —- 27.94 x 35 cm 16x20 —- 40.64 x 50.80 cm 18x24 —- 45.78 x 60.96 cm 24x36 —- 60.96 x 91.44 cm Shipping Info USA: Printed and shipped in the USA with USPS First Class CANADA: Printed and shipped from the USA with UPS. UK: Printed and shipped from the UK with Royal Mail First Class. Please message me if you would like to upgrade to tracked shipping. EUROPE: Printed and shipped from the U.K. with Royal Mail First Class. Please message me if you would like to upgrade to tracked shipping. ATTENTION BUYERS FROM EUROPE : Shipments to Europe may qualify for local import duty and/or VAT on entry. You are likely to be contacted by their local courier depot in your country and asked to pay a customs fee. GERMAN BUYERS: ATTENTION buyers from Germany. As of 1 July 2022, I can no longer fulfil orders to Germany. I am not able to comply with the new laws regarding LUCID registration. All orders placed will be cancelled and refunded. I am sorry and hopefully will be able to send orders to you in the future!
Home of the Kabbalah Society which follows the Toledano Tradition dating back to medieval Spain where the three branches of the Abrahamic revelation met in a civilised cosmopolitan atmosphere, not unlike our own epoch. Here the Kabbalah brought together an esoteric fusion of religion and philosophy. In our time we relate its ancient theories and practices to contemporary psychology, science and art. The Kabbalah Society has groups on all five continents and periodically holds conferences and workshops in different countries.
No need to take a break from breaking wind.
Always taking without giving back is not a balanced relationship. These relationship quotes define what lasting relationships are all about.
We have a really cool fart meme collection to share with you. I promise you these memes will get you laughing.