tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2820166730987074703.post4232967175269588165..comments2023-06-15T01:18:59.944-07:00Comments on ALLY'S ART: "Makin" ItAlice Walkowskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10846033750711880077noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2820166730987074703.post-59463384883863470912013-10-20T22:53:10.737-07:002013-10-20T22:53:10.737-07:00Dies it is!
My spiral macaroni fell apart. May no...Dies it is!<br /><br />My spiral macaroni fell apart. May not have had enough coats of paste on it. Not sure. <br /><br />I'm not sure what the stone is. Malachite sounds about right. Linda Kline brought a variety of stones to that class. The class was the one at the first conference we went to at Purdue. I would live to see some other ideas on what to do with this piece. Alice Walkowskihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10846033750711880077noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2820166730987074703.post-71578690766045261162013-10-18T11:19:04.834-07:002013-10-18T11:19:04.834-07:00Oooh, I love posts that provoke lots of thought!
...Oooh, I love posts that provoke lots of thought!<br /><br />1. Those things you call "templates" are what I know as "dies"...<br /><br />2. What went wrong when you tried the macaroni?<br /><br />3. But I enjoyed most the time I spent thinking how else I might have hung that last piece (with the green, is it malachite?, stone), and the ideas it generated. (Hint: I'm just glad no one was watching me peer at it while holding my computer screen upside-down!)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com