Mittwoch, 31. August 2011

Etsy Front Page Happy Dance !

Fellow Etsy Beadweaver, Crownrose Gems, posted this treasury a few days ago and today it spent a short time on the front page of Etsy.com ! My Venezia bracelet is part of the collection which is based on the popular Millenium trilogy by Swedish author, Stieg Larsson. I wouldn't have know about my front page appearance if it hadn't been for Statsy.com. I totally forgot about the fact that I linked it to my Facebook profile and besides generating an email to me, it automatically posted to Facebook ! Very handy indeed !

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/07/etsy-front-page-happy-dance.html

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A market of opportunities


Debbie Steinberg of East Deer Township, Pa., used Pittsburgh Public Market to incubate her business selling homemade marshmallows in a multitude of flavors ranging from Creamsicle to ghost pepper. Observer-Reporter


By Scott Beveridge

PITTSBURGH ? A new market house in Pittsburgh features vendors selling the traditional vegetables and one who dishes out homemade marshmallows flavored with the hottest pepper on the planet.

And in a back corner of Pittsburgh Public Market, the local East End Brewing Co. pours nonstop samples of its Big Hop India Pale and Session ales to a long line of thirsty customers.

?We?re so busy. It never ends,? said brewery salesman Steve Gorby, while working his booth at the market in the historic Pennsylvania Railroad Fruit Auction & Sales Building.

The venue opened in September along Smallman Street in the city?s Strip District after nearly 10 years of planning, said Cindy Cassell, its marketing manager.

A public market is an old concept brought to the United States from Europe, giving local farmers and small businesses a place to sell their produce and goods. At one time Pittsburgh had three such markets, Cassell said.

This one grew out of a 1999 study by William J. Green & Associates for the nonprofit Neighbors in the Strip that recommended such a destination in the area where merchants have long retailed produce, coffee, seafood and ethnic foods. Six years later the Urban Redevelopment Authority of Pittsburgh funded a public market study that caught the eye of former Gov. Ed Rendell.

?He really liked it,? Cassell said.

That led to the market receiving a state grant of $150,000 to add to the nearly $1.3 million it took to open the business opposite the 17th Street entrance to the sprawling brick building, she said.

Sarah Mansmann of Eighty Four had a hand in organizing the market. She wrote a concept paper about it while attending graduate school at the University of Pittsburgh and then worked there recruiting vendors.

?I think it?s a fantastic project to give local farmers a place to retail their products,? Mansmann said. ?Hopefully, some of them will make the transition into the Strip.?

?It?s a pretty amazing marketplace to get the best the region has to offer,? Cassell added.
Pittsburgh Marshmallow Factory has the homemade treats flavored with ghost pepper.

Owner Debbie Steinberg said her boyfriend, Chris Momberger, started out by making vanilla and chocolate marshmallows for parties and special occasions.

?I said, ?Hey, wait. We need to make Creamsicle.? It was the perfect first step,? Steinberg said.

Their flavored marshmallows ?had such a huge reception,? she said. ?We decided to stick it out.?

The small company wouldn?t have gotten off the ground without the low startup cost offered by Pittsburgh Public Market, which charges it $300 a month for the booth every Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Steinberg said.

?They kind of think of themselves as a business incubator,? she added.

A few booths down from her, a group of friends and relatives known as the Crested Duck Charcuterie has a meat case offering such delectables as smoked duck breast and smoked andouille. Across the aisle, a Penn State University Extension representative periodically shows up to offer growing tips. Other merchants are selling pierogies or stuffed grape leaves, and near the entrance, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh has set up a mini library. 

?There?s a little bit of everything,? Steinberg said.

On a hot and humid Friday in June and without air conditioning, Linzee Mihalcin is selling vegan roasted-tomato soup and Thai hot and sour soup with shrimp at Soup Nancys.

?It?s a fun place to come to work,? said Mihalcin, who with her partner, Sara Raszewski,  prepares the food in a Methodist church kitchen to bring to the market.

?You can?t beat the location. It?s been good so far,? Mihalcin said. ?It?s a fun place to be.?

(This story first appeared in the July/August edition of Living Washington County magazine, a publication of the Observer-Reporter.)
Linzee Mihalcin, an owner of Soup Nancys, offers a customer, Mark Trawka, a sample of her soup, made using such ingredients as white bean, bacon and spinach and sold at Pittsburgh Public Market. Observer-Reporter

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/07/market-of-opportunities.html

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And then the 911 call went silent

A couple pauses Tuesday at the temporary overlook to the new Flight 93 Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., two weeks before it opens on the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. (Scott Beveridge photo)


By Scott Beveridge


SHANKSVILLE, Pa. ? As the 10th anniversary nears of the Sept. 11, 2001, al-Queda terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, many Americans seem to be recalling where they were upon hearing the news about the tragedies.


My story about that day begins with the drive to work at a newspaper in little Washington, Pa., while listening and laughing to the venerable Pittsburgh rock & roll station WDVE-FM's morning show.


The disc jockey broke in, saying a plane had just crashed into the World Trade Center as I traveled a few blocks away from my job at the Observer-Reporter


My mind flashed then to an old photo I once saw of a B-25 that accidentally crashed in 1945 into the Empire State Building, and I mistakenly assumed something similar had just happened.


WDVE's next report a short time later that a second jetliner had struck another one of the Twin Towers as I pulled into the newspaper's parking lot sent me scurrying into the newsroom for more information.


My startled coworkers had gathered there around a television staring at its screen in stoned silence. I joined them before turning on a computer at my desk moments before the telephone there rang.


It was my mom, June Beveridge, on the line calling from Rostraver Township police department, where she worked as a clerk.


"Another plane just crashed in Westmoreland County," she whispered on the other end. "Are you OK?"


She was under strict orders not to leak police information to me because of my job as a journalist in neighboring Washington County.


The rule was off the table. Like most of us she was frightened. Like most mothers she wanted to be reassured her children were safe, especially because this terrorist attack played out before our eyes, too close to home.


I turned from our conversation to tell my colleagues about the fourth jet crash shortly about the time they watched on TV the third in flames at the Pentagon. They looked at me in stunned disbelief, and went back to watching CNN.


Moments later CNN announced the fourth plane had actually crashed in a field near Shanksville, Pa., in a county on the southeast side of Westmoreland.


Little did we know at the time that our newspaper probably received the first official report in the United States from my mother about that leg of the story.


Armed with the information, though, we couldn't do much with it in an era predating instant news reports on our website, Twitter or Facebook. Truth be told most people in America were helpless to the situation. Everyone seemed to have wanted to help. About all anyone could do was offer a hug or later donate blood for the survivors or sign up for the military to fight the subsequent and long war on terrorism.


Ten years later the story of the passengers and crew of Flight 93 that embarked from New Jersey to fly to San Francisco has become familiar to most Americans. Most of us now know they decided to overtake the hijackers, who selected to crash that plane in Somerset, just 20 minutes away from their attended target, rather than fulfill the mission.


Those Saudis were supposedly en route to destroy the U.S. Capitol while lawmakers were in session when that Boeing 757 rolled upside down in the sky 50 feet above ground before it crashed in a ball of fire, killing the 39 passengers and crew aboard the aircraft. The four hijackers perished as well, before having murdered a flight attendant during the ordeal.


The mistake about where that crash occurred is retold now in Shanksville as the National Park Service prepares to open a new memorial at the crash site this Sept 11 to the passengers and crew of Flight 93. The call came in from the plane to 911 over Westmoreland airspace from passenger Edward Felt.


The 911 transcript is in a notebook now in Shanksville detailing the confused responses from an unnamed dispatcher, who surely could not have been trained to receive such a disturbing call.


Felt used his cell phone at 9:58 a.m. near a rear rest room to place the call, according to the FBI report.


"Hijacking in progress," said Felt, a computer engineer from Matawan, NJ, and father of two daughters.


The dispatcher asked him for his phone number amid sometimes inaudible responses.


"Said plane is going down," the dispatcher stated.


The dispatcher then inaccurately announced the plane crashed somewhere over Mount Pleasant, a town in Westmoreland an hour's drive by car from Shanksville.


And then their conversation went silent.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/08/and-then-911-call-went-silent.html

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walkers 705


walkers 705, originally uploaded by drewzel.

Hi Stitchy friends,
I scanned this one ages ago and promptly forgot about it...hopeless aren't I? I found it in my Flickr just now. I don't have many Walker's transfers but I do like their style, they are more "realistic" than the stylised animals of Vogart and Aunt Martha's (which I also adore.) It depends what you're looking for. I'm guessing these date from around the 1940's and I can't even remember where I got them now! Another good thing about Walker's is that they always appear to give you double copies of the transfer sheet, which is a nice bonus, so usually the ones I've found, even if one sheet is used, the other will usually be intact. Hurrah!

And because our kitty friend on rollerskates is a popular motif...here you are:



scottie kittie1, originally uploaded by drewzel.

Click on the picture to go to Flickr and get sizes for printing.

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/11/walkers-705.html

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Stitch along with Mike's!



I'm a bad britches, stitchy friends, I know I am. But good stitchy fun is currently happening on the Meet me at Mike's blog. They've got a nice list of links to free Christmassy patterns, and they're having their own Christmas stocking stitch along, with two of their own designs. Pip's also put up some embroidery basics tutorials and they're all rather splendid. So if you haven't already, check it out! That should keep you out of mischief for a while!

Here's one that's been stitched, by a lovely gal at Brown Owls last Monday:

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/12/stitch-along-with-mikes.html

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Civil War road show on the go



The Pennsylvania Civil War Road Show appears in this cool video on its first stop at Sen. John Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh. The cool museum and whatever comes with it will be stopping in each of Pennsylvania's 67 counties over the next four years, the duration of the war among the states. The video is courtesy of The Borden Agency. Make sure to check the traveling museum out when it pulls in near you. Click here to read my review on the Pittsburgh tour.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/06/civil-war-road-show-on-go.html

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Remember Hobbytex?




Today's transfers are a recent op-shop (aka thrift store) find. A pack of Hobbytex iron-on transfers, simply marked "No. 302 children designs". They were wrapped up in a plastic bag when I bought them, so I couldn't check what was in there until I got it home, and lo and behold:

More Vogart - a sheet of "Jolly Farmyard Scenes" (aka Vogart 705) and a mixture of kitty and doggy patterns from Vogart 102 and the days of the week kitties. Does anyone know how Vogart patterns ended up being licensed to Hobbytex and Made in Australia*? I know Vogart used to make fabric paint at one stage too... I might have to go a-Google-ing Hobbytex.

I think there's a sheet missing from the pack as the other sheets are marked B, C and D. The third sheet I have I'm guessing is a Hobbytex original, as I've never seen it before, and the designs defintely seem to be geared towards fabric painting rather than embroidery. I like the designs though, they're good and "boyish": sailboats, racing cars, a rodeo rider and an assortment of old aeroplanes.






So if the wee boys in your life don't want a kitteh or a doggie, then I think this Spitfire-like fighter plane is the way to go!

*(..as the patterns proclaim. I like seeing "Made in Australia" on things.)

PS. Yes, I realise that the flags and the winning cup are still upside down on the first car pic, but I know my stitchy friends have the technology to overcome this.

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/07/remember-hobbytex.html

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Treasuries !!!

"Red for You"

"Colors (5)"

Two days and two treasuries ! My Caribbean Sea Blues necklace and African Helix and Glass Pendant necklace were featured in treasuries ! Ileana of Enchanted Beads and Daniella of Daniellart were kind enough to include my two necklaces. Plus Ileana took the time to send me a full screenshot as I have practically given up figuring out how to get the entire treasury in a screenshot. Please click the links under the photos to go to the treasuries :-)

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/01/treasuries.html

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Productive Day Off!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HowToMakeArt/~3/mrfanxk0lG8/productive-day-off.html

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The fungus among us

Autumn microcosm in a northern French wood
Learning to identify edible mushrooms has been one of those things that has floated about on my personal to-do list for many years.
Still, for starters I do know which one of these was the shamen's 'shroom of choice...

Source: http://microcosmic.blogspot.com/2007/10/fungus-among-us.html

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Harmony



For the land where it's a great travesty
To harm a stork's nest in a pear tree,
For storks serve us all...
I am homesick, Lord!...

Cyprian Kamil Norwid

Source: http://microcosmic.blogspot.com/2008/01/harmony.html

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Civil War road show on the go



The Pennsylvania Civil War Road Show appears in this cool video on its first stop at Sen. John Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh. The cool museum and whatever comes with it will be stopping in each of Pennsylvania's 67 counties over the next four years, the duration of the war among the states. The video is courtesy of The Borden Agency. Make sure to check the traveling museum out when it pulls in near you. Click here to read my review on the Pittsburgh tour.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/06/civil-war-road-show-on-go.html

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Dienstag, 30. August 2011

Aunt Martha's vegie melodrama


aunt marthas vegies, originally uploaded by drewzel.

I scanned this one, because I saw it blogged the other week with a different cover, I'll find the link and add it in here. Update : - it was Claudia's blog, the patterns are here.

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/08/aunt-martha-vegie-melodrama.html

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I know it's not vintage...

but I've just fell in love with these:

Go forth and make!

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/10/i-know-its-not-vintage.html

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Art Movies Galore

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HowToMakeArt/~3/hZRQLt047Ak/art-movies-galore.html

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Woo-hoo ! I'm in the COCO MoCA


Conan Necklace, originally uploaded by ambrosianbeads.

My beaded Conan pendant got selected for the online gallery of artwork depicting Conan O'Brien and his various images and logos. Last summer I made a peyote stitched pendant (started off as a bracelet, but I procrastinated) and I wore it to the Legally Prohibited from Being Funny on Television tour that Conan did while he was off the air. Team Coco started a Flickr group for people's artwork (they totally stole that idea from me, I started my group first !) and selected different works in all media. There is a Facebook LIKE this page button for my piece, but the link is wrong. If you click it, you end up LIKING somebody else's piece ! Grrrr !

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2011/04/conan-necklace.html

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A city folks' adventure along the old National Pike


By Scott Beveridge



A restored National Pike tollhouse in LaVale, Md., survives today  as a lonely reminder of America's western migration that changed the world. (Scott Beveridge photo)


ALONG THE OLD NATIONAL PIKE, Md. ? A clerk at Billie?s Gas and Grub in the Allegany Mountains immediately takes me for one of those lost city folks when I approach her counter today with a bottle of water in hand asking for directions.

?Yeeeesss. Where are you goin??? she says when I inquire if the narrow Maryland Route 144 passing her tiny store in Flintstone is part of the old National Road.

?Washington, D.C.,? I respond. ?How long does it take to get there?? I ask.

She replies that it?s a 2 � hour drive if I hop onto the highway about 10 miles down the road.

?That way you?ll get to see some of the old countryside, blah, blah, blah,? she says, rolling her eyes.

She?s seen my kind before, a nostalgic motorist who sometimes prefers to take the back road to see America from a lost era. I?m slowing down on vacation this week and do not want to compete for a part of the four-lane asphalt with tractor-trailers and rude aggressive drivers to spend some time in the nation's capitol. I?m on this two-lane to experience historic stretches of the National Pike, otherwise known as the National Road, Cumberland Road and Route 40, while this, the nation?s oldest interstate marks its 200th birthday.

The federal government laid out this former turnpike in 1811, and then Congress argued for more than two decades over whether or not the United States should be in the business of building roads. Eventually the tasks of collecting tolls and maintaining this road were turned over to the states as the road expanded into Pennsylvania and beyond during the America?s Western Expansion.

That story is retold at the perfectly preserved LaVale Toll House, which collected in 1833 nearly $10,000 in travelers? fees during its first year in operation in Maryland. That?s an amazing sum that speaks to the volume of people this road served then, considering the tollhouse keeper charged just 3 cents for every led horse, mull or ass that passed through its gate.

The steep of portions of this old trail over the Appalachians and its dangerous switch backs survive as testaments to the difficulties pioneers faced in forging new territories.

I wonder if most drivers today wearing blindfolds on the nearby modern highways know what they are missing on this scenic byway.

I am traveling the nearly 100-mile stretch between Uniontown, Pa., and Hancock, Md., and pass many stone or brick Colonial houses that once served as inns for stagecoach passengers and cattle drovers in need of rest. Women would enter these old houses through one door leading to the parlor while the men walked through another into the tavern. Guests were charged by the candle inch for the light they burned at night, and they then slept like spoons to compete for the space on the beds.


East of Uniontown I pass a summit with a roadside sign identifying it as Negro Mountain and wonder how such a racist name could still exist in modern times.

Down the road I stop along a curve in downtown Frostburg, Md., to take a peek inside the historic three-story Failinger?s Hotel Gunter. Its brick fa�ade is wearing patriotic bunting two doors down from an old storefront with boarded up windows. The hotel lobby boasts a grand antique wooden stairway oddly paired with a modern hotel registry counter. This town, at its face, is struggling for survival like most between here and there that have been overshadowed by modern highways.

That?s more obvious further east in sleepy Hancock, Md., where it costs just 25 cents to park a car for an hour on Main Street. This downtown is heavily dressed in the Southern Cross, two centuries after that flag was overtaken by the stars and stripes at the end of the Civil War. There is a near-empty store here named Redneck Mall that sells a tacky bikini made with material matching the Confederate flag.

A block away the interior walls of Hancock Town Tavern are lined with too man shot-down animal trophies to count. Their mounted heads in such forms as a zebra, moose and horned wild boar hog are perched near four breathing and seated bar patrons who cannot seem to quit staring me down.

At this point I realize I?m an out-of-place tourist from the North who needs to redirect myself back to the fast lanes of travel.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/07/city-folk-adventure-along-old-national.html

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Artistic Doubts

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HowToMakeArt/~3/59IKZ0OtkAE/artistic-doubts.html

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Not technically vintage


...but I've been enjoying this site for more stitch inspiration and patterns. Very cute!

Source: http://stitchybritches.blogspot.com/2008/06/not-technically-vintage.html

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Treasuries !!!

"Red for You"

"Colors (5)"

Two days and two treasuries ! My Caribbean Sea Blues necklace and African Helix and Glass Pendant necklace were featured in treasuries ! Ileana of Enchanted Beads and Daniella of Daniellart were kind enough to include my two necklaces. Plus Ileana took the time to send me a full screenshot as I have practically given up figuring out how to get the entire treasury in a screenshot. Please click the links under the photos to go to the treasuries :-)

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/01/treasuries.html

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A hot-selling poor man's sandwich

The tasty fried bologna sandwich at Elrama Tavern. (Scott Beveridge photo)


At some point when I was a kid an adult suggested we fry bologna for sandwiches when there wasn't much else in the refrigerator at home.


It was probably one of those days when my dad was walking the picket line during labor problems at his Monessen, Pa., steel mill and the strike pay wasn't enough to meet the bills.


I remember feeling poor until getting a taste of that cheap sausage and lard lunchmeat blackened in butter in a cast iron skillet and thinking it was delicious. It soon became a staple in our house even when times were good and until I grew up and eventually quit buying processed meats.


So it came to my surprise tonight when I discovered a fried bologna - pronounced baloney - sandwich on the menu at a tavern along the Monongahela River south of Pittsburgh.


Elrama Tavern on Route 837 in Elrama churches up its version of this Great Depression-era delicacy by topping it with hot pepper cheese between two slices of Texas toast. The spicy cheese was an excellent compliment this great sandwich at the business in Washington County.


"We sell a lot of them," my server said, seeming surprised that I thought it odd that any restaurant would even have such an item on its menu.


The place with a mostly rustic decor around a 1930s Art Deco bar was filled with customers enjoying a Tuesday Margarita party. The staff wore matching blue floral Hawaiian print blouses, and one server's outfit was offset by a bright yellow grass skirt. A guitar playing man was singing beach songs on the back deck on an otherwise sleepy night in this coal patch.


My bill came to cheap $10.07 for a meal that included French fries and two large drafts of Yuengling. Now that was a throw back price to the days when cooks on a tight budget could make anything taste great.

Source: http://scottbeveridge.blogspot.com/2011/06/hot-selling-poor-mans-sandwich.html

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Behind bars - Rabat Zoo



I recently spent three days in Rabat, Morocco to field a proposal to create a tourism/species conservation centre for Barbary lions in the Atlas mountains. The Barbary, or Atlas Lion went extinct in the wild during the early 20th century. Later it was proposed that the Sultan of Morocco's private collection would likely have specimens of this subspecies within it. In the 1970's these lions were transferred to Rabat zoo, and some later came to our park. Without proper breeding management over the decades, none of the remaining captive lions housed in zoos around the world are likely to be 100% Barbary lions on a genetic level. But it's the closest thing we have left.

Unfortunately the Moroccan authorities ultimately decided not to go ahead with the idea.

Source: http://microcosmic.blogspot.com/2008/01/behind-bars-rabat-zoo.html

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EBW Spring Swap-Tale of Procrastination and Regret !





A couple months ago, an idea for a swap of beadwoven creations among members of the Etsy Beadweavers started to be tossed around. 12 members signed on and then the beading began. I received Laura Zeiner's name. I didn't know Laura, but she listed her preferences and said her favorite colors were earth tones...wouldn't you know, most of the bead colors in my stash are bright "jewel" tones like magenta, purple, royal blue...alot of black, gold and silver beads too. I had to search the stash for a few muted colors and thought about trying out a new beadweaving technique. I was curious about the spiral peyote stitch I had recently seen in Bead and Button and thought about creating a bracelet for her. I poured out the beads, got settled and time after time, got lost in the pattern and found myself ripping and restarting. For some reason, I couldn't wrap my brain around the directions, or the pattern just didn't present itself in the beadwork as I went. Oh, well, back to the drawing board.

After having procrastinated long enough on even starting the project, I found myself up against the deadline and feeling guilty. I tried a couple more designs, but they weren't interesting enough or shaping up properly. I had some round agate slices and one of them was in muted brown shades. I started beading around it in peyote stitch, switching bead sizes, but the edges were too wavy...more ripping ensued. Finally, the piece began to shape up, but I needed to finish and get it in the mail. I slipped it on a silver neck cable and packed it up to send, regretting that it was just a mere shadow of the project I had in mind initially. Fortunately, Laura wrote that it was beautiful and she loved it. Whew ! I hope she's not just being nice ! Please visit Laura's blog: Stick Lizard Designs and make sure to follow the link to her Etsy shop.

Today I received the swap item that was made for me by Hadass and was thrilled that she used my favorite color, magenta and that it fit perfectly. She added pearls which I never use, so I'm pleased to have some to wear. Please visit her blog: Spring Colors and make sure to check out her Etsy shop.

Thanks to Christine of Christine's Beadworks for keeping us all in the loop ! Please stop by her blog and see the beautiful mosaic of all the beadwoven creations made for the swap.

Source: http://ambrosianbeads.blogspot.com/2010/04/ebw-spring-swap-tale-of-procrastination.html

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