Finding 100% gluten-free bakeries in Spain isn't easy but here are four options for you in Málaga. Living in Malaga sin Gluten just got easier!
Apprenez tout sur l'éco-pâturage pour différents types de terrain. Découvrez comment choisir les espèces animales pour une gestion écologique et efficace.
Our Fashion and Textiles team of two, Charlotte and Philippa, spent a recent Saturday natural dyeing, re-colouring samples and offcuts from their combined fabric collections. Philippa Grogan details their day of dyeing experiments.
Photos: Jess Isaac | Design: Amber Interiors SHOP THE LOOK: It’s no secret around here that my love for Amber Interiors runs deep – I mean, I’ve featured her work countless times over the years and I don’t see myself stopping anytime soon. But following the construction of her own home over the last while […]
Aujourd’hui, nous partageons avec vous tout nos contacts dans le petit monde de la teinture végétale et naturelle française !
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MORE ABOUT: Sagrada Familia Plaça de la Sagrada Família, Mallorca, 401, 08013 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain Built: 1882-2026 Architect: Antoni Gaudi Structural Engineer: Antoni Gaudi The Sagrada Fami…
Eco Garne für maximalen Komfort Seidenweiches Tragegefühl Designed in Bremen, Made in Italy! Wir versprechen maximale Bequemlichkeit dank hochwertiger Bio Baumwolle und weicher Verstärkung in der Sohle. Zusammensetzung: 62% Organic Cotton - 23% Polyester recycled - 12% Polyamid - 3% Elasthan
From solar-powering to recycled material, these tiny homes are fantastic. We love container homes and homes from recycled materials, and we’ve have a good selection here for you! Container homes with style This little container home is made from a wooden upper story on top of a shipping container! Very cool! We love how the […]
MORE ABOUT: Sagrada Familia Plaça de la Sagrada Família, Mallorca, 401, 08013 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain Built: 1882-2026 Architect: Antoni Gaudi Structural Engineer: Antoni Gaudi The Sagrada Fami…
BioEsters is a bio-based material that presents a sustainable yarn alternative for designers.
Vind harmonie in stijl met het Matchmaking T-shirt. Gemaakt van 100% organisch katoen in sereen Off White, is het een symbool van eenheid met de planeet. Draag jouw waarden met trots en maak een statement voor eco-bewuste mode met dit essentiële kledingstuk.
2017 Topic 16: Rustification Hello everyone, it's Leandra here with you tonight, before we launch into the new topic, which I sense you are all going to LOVE! Let's see who won the last challenge for the Pearlescent topic! The winner is: Craftyfield from Crafty Endeavours She got on a bit of a roll with challenge entries over the last 2 weeks, and even snuck an entry in at the 11th hour of the challenge deadline! The random number fell on her black and white entry, but all of them were quite different with a touch of pearlescent about them all! Congratulations! Email Darcy to claim your prize. [email protected] So we had no shortage of bloggers wanting to play with rust for the new topic, and that doesn't surprise me, as the whole concept of making things look rusty has been super popular in mixed media circles for the last few years. Whether you are working onto fabrics, wood, metal, even glass, creating a rust patina can be done in all kinds of ways, and in this post I'm going to share a few with you. Please feel free to join in the blog challenge by linking your own creativity at the foot of this post to any of you online social media links. Experiments from Alice Fox onto fabric with objects that can be rusted. There are loads of photos from Alice on Pinterest, it is a good way to get some inspirational ideas of how you could rust fabric... I particularly loved the blog post she shared of an exhibition, the piece below was one on show. It is fascinating how rusty fabric is so popular, yet lots of Artists create their own take and pull together the inspirations in different ways and methods. Jennifer Coyne has created a rust effect by printing onto teabags. You can see the process in this link here, where she took a photo and then extrapolated that onto teabags. She explains on her blog how she stitched it all together to create a much larger print. You will need to follow a few posts on her blog to understand how it all came together! Amazing! As below a work in progress... And then here is the finished piece being exhibited. See here. I also loved discovering about Jule Mallet She also uses her fabrics rusted in all kinds of ways to create a wide range of objects, dimensional and flat! and she makes prints... Even displaying rusty fabric can be done simplistically to great effect. And one of our own designers, Lin Brown, is also a dab hand at rusty fabric too, here is just one photo from her blog, but there are more if you follow the link. I adore how she brings her layers together so perfectly! Charlotte Hupfield, a ceramicist, is inspired by pieces like this rusty panel.... ... to inspire her when creating her ceramic art such as the samples below. Cracks, layers, light and dark. Beautiful! and how amazing is this! Take a bureau, add some paint, tadaaa. Here is our own mixed media specialist at rusting things...or at least, using Frescos to make something look rusty! Nikki Acton is a genius at this, see the details here on her blog. She has many posts using paints to create rusty effects, and the example below is gogeous with thos classic colours of patina and rust! The textured heart allows for shades to play in the light. Totally gorgeous, love the crackles too! Plus she gets loads of Seth Apter stamps and dies in the mix so cleverly! Deb blogged this piece over at Paxton Valley Folk Art , such a beaut using all kinds of products, including metal tape, embossed and coloured, die-cut shapes painted, and the whole frame ebellished. And here is Finnabair with one of her typical layered compositions. The cool thing about this idea, layers of textured objects, is you can apply any colour of paint to your base layer, then create a rust effect from there. This could be purely with paints and stippled layers, tickled with Treasure Gold waxes, or (and I've been wanting to try this for ages) ...how about painting shades of patina blue/greens onto the base, and then applying Rusting Powder?? I'm thinking a base in shades of turquoise-green patina, then you could apply a layer of gel medium, sprinkle all over liberally with rusting powder, tip off the excess. Once the gel is dry, you are then ready to rust the powder by keeping the powder damp for at least one and probably more like 2-3 hours, and of course, the rusty effect will develop. If you add a bit of acid (vinegar) to your water it will speed up the effect, or you could just put the canvas outside and let the natural elements do the work for you over a period of days or even weeks! Another rusty mixed media guru is Laura Bomber. If you check out this blog post she shares how she created all these frames using different painterly techniques. Brenda Brown created another gorgeous piece here with paints, and there are wonderful photos on her blog explaining how she created this. Ruth Mescall is another rust addicted crafter. Check out this post for more ideas. And how cool is this from Sally Mankus!! An acrylic skin with embedded rusty stuff! See here for details! OK, so I could go on and on sharing mixed media rusty things, so let's move on. What about rusted objects? What can you find in a local dump, on the side of the road or have you got a stash of hidden objects in the corner of your garden with some rusted treasures? Not sure you will have any of these to hand, but they are nice to look at! A typesetter... Corrugated iron always rusts to perfection! We actually have one of these rusting here on the farm...a newer version though, so not quite as 'pretty' as this! Old train... A sewing machine! (*shocked face*) or maybe you have loads of these lying about?? Finally some art, the layers of peeling and cracked paint always has massive appeal to me, I could fill any room with this type of creation, I love the colours and this style of abstract art. How hard can it be to do something like this ..worth a go I reckon! So as I said at the outset, no shortage of ideas for this topic! I think you're going to enjoy yourselves! I know our bloggers have! Wait to you see what they have been up to ober the coming 2 weeks!.... Have fun! ~ Leandra Don't forget to follow Darcy and Leandra's Pinterest boards if this topic pushes your buttons, you will see plenty more examples to whet your appetite there! I am really looking forward to seeing what you create over the next 2 weeks! We hope that you learn something interesting from our blog. Our bloggers deeply appreciate your comments so much, so please take time to let them know you've been inspired! Why not join our challenge by blogging your interpretation of the current topic and link it here? The current topic link will close 17:00 (London Time) Sunday, 12th November 2017, and the winner will be announced 2 hours later at 19:00. All links go in the draw to win a £50 voucher to spend on products of your choice from the PaperArtsy online store. An InLinkz Link-up Challenge Guidelines The challenge is a for you to show how you are inspired by the current blog topic. We encourage you to play with us and explore your personal creative style. Please mention which PA blog post inspired you and and why (link directly to that post). Please don't link to the home page of your blog because then no-one can track back to easily find the original post. We prefer your challenge blog post is created exclusive to our challenge, but if our topic fits perfectly with another challenge, then you may link to both if appropriate. You are most welcome to use stamps/ products/ substrates you have to hand from a variety of companies, we do not expect you to exclusively use PA products - it's lovely when you do though! You can enter as many times as you like. We don't want to restrict your creativity! NB. Link closes at 17:00 Sunday 12th November, 2017 (London Time) Prize: The winner will receive a £50 credit voucher to be redeemed on the PaperArtsy Website. The credit voucher includes VAT and postage. We request that one of your purchases is an A5 rubber stamp. You can add any other items to your basket, but the final total should not exceed £50. It's your responsibility to claim your prize coupon from Darcy. email: [email protected] NEW Challenge/ winner: Each fortnight on Sunday, the winner will be announced at 19:00 (London time). In the same post, the link for the next fortnight will be posted. Good Luck! If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask!
having blogged my primary research on barcelona i decided to gather some visual research to help me get some ideas for the form of the publication. i began by starting a new board on pinterest to collect and record ideas relevant to the design and production of my publication. this can be found on the link below: uk.pinterest.com/joseharrisones/design-publication/ i also looked elsewhere for different scrap book ideas: i found a website called 'the scrapbooker' which contained and explained some of the ins and outs of scrap booking which i thought could be useful - WHAT IS SCRAPBOOKING? Scrapbooking is a visual record of our lives, our memories and our journey. It is a method of preserving our personal and family history and gives our future generations a creative and valuable look into our past. Many of us remember saving (and still do) cinema and rail tickets, notes, special birthday cards and messages, postcards, tags, artwork and photographs – some simply glued this memorabilia into traditional grey scrapbooks with diary notes or journaling next to them. (I still have a simple book with dark grey pages containing photographs, notes and hospital paraphenalia from my first daughter’s birth). Things have moved on a little since then. Modern scrapbooking takes all of these principals and elements and combines them creatively using card stock, patterned paper, ribbon and embellishments, into scrapbook pages, albums and photobooks. By creating these albums, we are ensuring the preservation of our stories and the details attached to the photographs we treasure. http://thescrapbooker.co.uk/scrapbooking-101/ there was a lot of rubbish online and so i decided to gather some research on other things because i had already established a mental picture of the style of publication that i wanted to design. i decided then looked into some different forms of typography: art nouveau style type - https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=art+nouveau+typography&safe=off&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=laVXVfbHOYe7UYX2gKgH&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAQ&biw=1276&bih=698 while searching about typography from barcelona i came across this project which was really moving: A Spanish NGO and an advertising agency have teamed up to create typefaces based on the handwriting of homeless people. The handwritten carboard signs that help desperate people to beg on the street may be the very thing that helps them leave it. Samples of handwriting are photographed and cleaned up in a studio and then transformed into commercially available fonts. Individuals and companies can buy the different fonts through Homelessfonts.org. The proceeds will be used to finance the work of the Arrels foundation for homeless people in Barcelona. http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/homeless-fonts-typefaces-based-handwriting-people-living-streets-barcelona-1452239 i thought this was a really interesting concept because we saw a lot of homelessness in barcelona and i got chatting to a few people living on the streets and for them, like anyone anywhere who is homeless, life is very difficult so i really admire the people who did this project. the new barcelona fc font used on the shirts: http://media.creativebloq.futurecdn.net/sites/creativebloq.com/files/images/2012/08/vasavafont.jpg http://www.quotessays.com/gallery/keith-harings-quotes-1.jpg.html http://www.quotessays.com/gallery/keith-harings-quotes-1.jpg.html Flags of barcelona (colour scheme ideas) - current flag: previous flag: The current flag of Barcelona combines the cross of Saint George (in Catalan, Sant Jordi), the patron saint of the city, with the traditional red and yellow bars of the Senyera, the ancient symbol of the Crown of Aragon (here, the bars are vertical, though the modern flag of Catalonia has horizontal stripes). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_Barcelona barcelona fc colours: http://www2.fansshare.com/gallery/photos/278330/Barcelona-Fc-Flag/?loadimage i also gathered some info on the transport system to further inform the section: http://www.mapametrobarcelona.net/mapas-metro/tourist-map-of-barcelona.jpg The T10 ticket (Zone 1 ticket) is another type of transport card which you can purchase at the entrance to any metro station. Unlike the Barcelona Transport Card a T10 ticket will only entitle you to 10 journeys on the metro, FGC (FGC run train lines similar to the metro around the city centre) buses, tram and RENFE all Zone 1 areas. The main city centre areas are all in Zone 1. The T10 ticket can be used on more than one means of transport and all be counted as a single journey provided that your journey is less than 1 hour and 15 minutes. This means for example, you can make changes at metro stops (provided you don't leave the metro), then leave the metro and jump on a bus to finish your journey or vice versa as long as the total length of the journey is less than 1 hour and 15 minutes. http://www.barcelona-tourist-guide.com/en/transport/barcelona-metro.html http://www.barcelonas.com/images/green-l3-barcelona-metro-line.jpg i tried to make an estimite or a calculation as to how far we had walked but could not recolect every exact path we took and so calculated the distaces between the focal points of our journey: appt to macba: 1.2km appt to picasso museum: 750m appt to rambla (+up and down): 1.1km (approx. X10 = 11km) lesseps (station) to park guell: 2.8km monumental (station) to sagrada familia: 800m sagrada familia to casa batllo: 1.7km appt. to beach (and along beach): 2.6km TOTAL: 20.85 km X 2.5 (at least, to account for all other walking) = 52.1km (in miles = 32.3mi) https://www.google.co.uk/maps distance between stanstead and el prat airport approx: 1607.7 km flight time: 2 hrs 15 mins https://www.google.co.uk/maps The Parc Güell is the wonderful result of a failure. Its promoter, the aristocrat Eusebi Güell, wanted to build a garden city on the site of the Can Muntaner de Dalt estate, located in the district of La Salut in Gràcia. The grounds of the estate covered a large area but they were not ideal for this type of building. The park was located 150 metres above sea level on uneven, poor quality land. In 1900, Antoni Gaudí was commissioned to design the project. Only three plots had been sold in the early years of the century and this brought the project to the brink of failure. Building work came to a halt in 1914. The only remaining elements from this ambitious venture are a series of extraordinary structures by Gaudí designed for communal use, which include the stone viaducts which are perfectly integrated into the landscape and connect the different levels, and the plaza with its curving mosaic bench. The Parc Güell was purchased by Barcelona Municipal Council and made into a public park in 1922. It is a truly unique park and was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1984. http://www.barcelonamovie.com/atractiu.aspx?idAtractiu=32&idFilm=7&culture=en i found a really good pdf version of the mini museum in la sagrada familia explaining all the derivations and influences gaudi took from nature - http://www.sagradafamilia.cat/sfup/prensa/2010-09-01-01.pdf In mathematics, a hyperboloid is a quadric – a type of surface in three dimensions – described by the equation (hyperboloid of one sheet), or (hyperboloid of two sheets). Both of these surfaces asymptote to the same conical surface as x or y become large: These are also called elliptical hyperboloids. If and only if a = b, it is a hyperboloid of revolution, and is also called a circular hyperboloid. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyperboloid i did some extended research into picasso to inform the section - Pablo Ruiz y Picasso, also known as Pablo Picasso (/pɪˈkɑːsoʊ, -ˈkæsoʊ/;[2] Spanish: [ˈpaβlo piˈkaso]; 25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973), was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, stage designer, poet and playwright who spent most of his adult life in France. As one of the greatest and most influential artists of the 20th century, he is known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture,[3][4] the co-invention of collage, and for the wide variety of styles that he helped develop and explore. Among his most famous works are the proto-Cubist Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907), and Guernica (1937), a portrayal of the Bombing of Guernica by the German and Italian airforces at the behest of the Spanish nationalist government during the Spanish Civil War. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso i then found a tutorial on japanese stitch binding to help me go through the process - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j-r6c_trSxY from this research i went on to develop the publication itself using hand rendered methods solely.
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Ti sei mai chiesto quante pulizie domestiche devi fare almeno una volta all'anno? La risposta potrebbe sorprenderti. Ci sono alcune attività di pulizia che, se fatte regolarmente, possono mantenere la tua casa in uno stato impeccabile. Ecco una lista delle cinque pulizie principali che dovresti fare almeno una volta l'anno per mantenere la tua casa pulita e igienizzata.
Come riciclare in modo utile e creativo le vecchie spugnette. Le spugne sono oggetti di uso quotidiano, che però tendono ad usurarsi e quindi vengono
Fester Uni Canvas Stoff aus 100% edler Bio Baumwolle in der Farbe lawn green. Eyecatcher ✓ Wertige Farben ✓ Canvas ✓ DIY Stoffe ✓ Öko Möbelstoffe ✓ Bio ✓ Organische Baumwolle
Dans cet article, je vous partage une recette écologique et zéro déchet pour faire votre spray maison nettoyant et dégraissant.
Esta receta te va a encantar, porque quién dijo que las cosas sin gluten son difíciles de hacer, no quedan con la misma textura y los mismos...
Tra le varie faccende domestiche che si devono fare regolarmente per fare in modo che la nostra abitazione risulti sempre pulita, c’è ovviamente il
Finding 100% gluten-free bakeries in Spain isn't easy but here are four options for you in Málaga. Living in Malaga sin Gluten just got easier!
Te contamos cómo compostar para nutrir tus verduras con un fertilizante natural.
Your Oscar Magnuson frame is an all-natural product. It is handmade from bio-acetate by highly skilled craftspeople in our Italian factory. The bio-acetate, deriving from wood and cotton fibers, gives it an exclusive touch and a sense of warmth and silkiness, which can only come from natural substances. Our bio-acetate is 100% eco-friendly, 100% biodegradable and 100% recyclable. Oscar Magnuson frames come encased in 100% organic leather sourced from the Swedish tannery Tarnsjö Garveri.
Laissez-vous tenter par Effie U ! Le tee-shirt Effie U Rose givré est écoresponsable, sa matière est en coton bio certifié GOTS. Faites votre choix parmi notre large gamme de couleurs estivales. Composition : 100% Coton BIO certifié GOTS
Besoin de nettoyer votre douche ou baignoire ? C'est vrai que le calcaire et les résidus de savon s'incrustent rapidement... Pas besoin d'acheter d'Antikal pour autant ! Non seulement ce n'est pas donné, mais en plus c'est bourré de produits chimiques. Heureusement, voici la recette magique de mon pschitt pour nettoyer douche et baignoire efficacement. Ne vous inquiétez pas, c'est super facile à faire. Vous n'avez besoin que de vinaigre blanc et de liquide vai
Getrocknete Tomatenflocken in BIO-QUALITÄT Ideal zur Verfeinerung von Saucen, Salaten, Brot Toppings & Co. Intensiver Tomaten Geschmack
Oggi scopriremo un rimedio poco conosciuto ma molto efficace per rimuovere le macchie di candeggina dai tessuti
Confection : portugaise Composition : 100% molleton de coton biologique certifié GOTS Pourquoi Pépites a choisi ce vêtement ? Un style minimaliste, des détails adorables, des couleurs douces et mixtes, découvrez l'univers intemporel de Studio Bohème avec la sélection de Pépites. Des combinaisons, des Tee-Shirts, des pantalons, des shorts, des blouses en passant par quelques accessoires, laissez-vous tenter par cette belle marque française, éco-responsable et fabriquée au Portugal. Description du produit : Pantalon large forme carotte mixte et très confortable. En molleton de coton biologique ultra cosy. 2 poches arrière. Ceinture élastiquée. Conseils taille: prendre une taille de plus que l'âge de votre enfant. Par exemple du 24M pour un enfant de 18 mois. Attention: le molleton va rétrécir d'environ 5% au premier lavage.
Your Oscar Magnuson frame is an all-natural product. It is handmade from bio-acetate by highly skilled craftspeople in our Italian factory. The bio-acetate, deriving from wood and cotton fibers, gives it an exclusive touch and a sense of warmth and silkiness, which can only come from natural substances. Our bio-acetate is 100% eco-friendly, 100% biodegradable and 100% recyclable. Oscar Magnuson frames come encased in 100% organic leather sourced from the Swedish tannery Tarnsjö Garveri.
Getting Nerdy is the best choice for engaging and fun life science lessons and resources for your middle school science classroom!