What would you look like if you were a magical girl!!!!!!pls tag me in drawings of your mahou shoujos !
Hi guys!! Once again trying to work on consistency so for this month here's a small set of trendy bottoms! Hope you enjoy! Diesel Denim I tried my best with the uv1 and weights for the accessories!…
If you've landed on this blog post, chances are you're a big and tall guy looking for business casual outfit ideas. You're looking to level up your wardrobe, but you're not totally sure where to
Check out our Wade Ripple, ELEMENTAL’S relaxed, go-with-the-flow guy, made with paper and paints.
FREE daily math warm-ups for second grade are the perfect way to start the morning with your students. Great 2nd grade math review.
Men's smart casual can be a confusing dress code to get right. We'll break down the style basics, key pieces, outfits, and tips to help you nail your look!
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Taking a closer look at the Salford grad's photography showcase
For the 2nd graders' second project in their shape unit, we focused on identifying and using natural shapes in a drawing. We also took some time to talk about and identify positive and negative shapes in our work, too. This project was pretty easy to execute and the results are pretty terrific. I found the project on pinterest. No info except for four student examples in a photo. The drawing took us about 40 minutes to do, which left 10 minutes for our exit slips and 10 minutes for choice centers at the end. The moon shape was made by laying down a circle template and pushing out away from it with the side of our color sticks. I pointed out that the shape was NOT outlined, but showed up because of the difference in light and dark along that edge. This was their first experience with creating implied instead of contour lines. We then drew out our tree trunks, trying to make them go from thick to thin to make the scene look more 3d. We filled them in with the wide side of the large chisel tip sharpie markers. We then added 10 big branches, then 3 smaller branches, and then one small branch to the drawing. We could also add a few animals (natural shapes) to the scene, as long as they were completely filled in to be consistent with the rest of the drawing. Since the skull painting project went long last week, the first exit slip questions was to tell me which of these projects showed symmetry and how did they know that was the case. Their second question was to identify the types of shapes they used in their tree drawing. One of the second graders made a moving monster over at the monster block center at the end of their class! Very cool:) If you are active online, checking out projects by art ed bloggers around the country, you are probably familiar with the work of Cassie Stephens. She does some amazing work with her kiddos and she makes a whole lot of awesome outfits in her spare (ha!) time. Anywho, she does this "What the Art teacher Wore" series and I thought I might spend a minute here or there sharing what a lazy, yet somewhat creative and silly art teacher wears out here in San Diego. Starting things off is this fab ensemble;) shorts- Old Navy, glasses- Nike, shirt- Target, gray hair- Mother Nature
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Do you know that feeling when you've got your favorite outfit on, and your hair is sitting just right, but for some reason, you just don't feel as attractive as you want to? You can't
Travel agency - Landing page designed by Uix Shuvo. Connect with them on Dribbble; the global community for designers and creative professionals.
Sales orders list designed by Anton Yefimenko. Connect with them on Dribbble; the global community for designers and creative professionals.
70s Moments - The Kinky Issue
Learn a little about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot, and enjoy our colouring pages, worksheets, writing paper and other activities. We've got something for all ages here, for fun or for learning. Why do we learn about Guy Fawkes and the Gunpowder Plot? In England, in 1605 during the reign of James I, an act of treason was planned that could have changed the course of our history. At the last moment, the Gunpowder Plot was foiled, and now we commemorate the traitors - and in particular, the scapegoat Guy Fawkes - every year with Bonfire Night! Who was Guy Fawkes? Guy Fawkes (1570 to 1606), also known as Guido Fawkes, was one of a group of Catholic plotters who planned, but failed, to blow up Parliament - now known as the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. What was the Gunpowder Plot? At the time, King James I was on the throne. England had broken away from the Catholic faith and the Church of Rome in Henry VIII's reign (by 1536), but there were still many Catholics in the country. Guy Fawkes joined up with a group of thirteen Catholic plotters, led by Robert Catesby, who planned to overthrow the King and put a Catholic monarch back on the throne. The plotters rented space in the cellars of the House of Lords and filled it with gunpowder. Guy Fawkes was put in charge. They planned to set off the gunpowder during the opening of Parliament, on 5th November 1605. One or more of the plotters, however, were worried that some of their fellow Catholics and friends would be at the opening and get caught in the explosion, and wrote to warn them not to be there that day. We know that a certain Lord Monteagle received a letter warning him to go to the country because Paliament would "receive a terrible blow". Lord Monteagle showed the letter to the King, and the cellars were thoroughly searched and Guy Fawkes caught. After several days of horrible torture, Guy Fawkes gave up the names of his fellow plotters and eight of them went to trial in January 1606. All were found guilty and executed in the terrible fashion of the times. On 5th November 1605 Londoners were encouraged to celebrate the King's escape from assassination by lighting bonfires, provided that "this testemonye of joy be carefull done without any danger or disorder" - and indeed an Act of Parliament soon followed, declaring 5th November as a day of thanksgiving throughout the country for "the joyful day of deliverance". Modern Celebrations When we celebrate Bonfire Night now, it seems very far removed from the events of four hundred years ago! For centuries since then, communities have come together to build a big bonfire and make an effigy - a model - of Guy Fawkes using old clothes stuffed with newspaper, to burn on the bonfire (see Penny for the Guy). Fun fact: When you use the word "guy" in your sentences, have you thought where it comes from? The "guy" tradition of Bonfire Night gradually found it's way into our language, and by the 19th century the word "guy" was used to refer to a strangely dressed man. From there it was adopted into American English to refer to any man, and is of course still commonly used today! Our Guy Fawkes Resources