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Provides instructions for a variety of origami projects, including a coaster, a utensil holder, a picture frame, a dove, a gift box, and a letter holder.
"Hugely prolific, Vincent Van Gogh produced over 2000 works (nearly 900 paintings and more than 1,100 drawings and sketches) in a ten-year period. His story and (largely) self-taught skills are an inspiration to budding artists everywhere. Fantastic Forgeries is a simple course in the artist's legendary skills, so readers can learn his innovative techniques and then adapt and apply those techniques to their own renditions and drawings. You'll begin just as Van Gogh did, first mastering black and white drawings, including figures and landscapes Then move on to color works, including watercolor, and then finally move on to oil painting. Within each chapter, the reader will come across a specif...
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Lawyer Andy Carpenter and his golden retriever, Tara, work to free a man who risked it all to help a dog in need Lawyer Andy Carpenter and his wife, Laurie, enjoy walking their dogs, Tara and Sebastian. By this point in their marriage, it’s routine. When out for one of their strolls, their simple ritual isn’t so simple anymore. Across the street, a man is mistreating his dog. Three things happen at once: Andy yells, Laurie runs to stop the abuse, and so does a closer passerby, who so thoroughly beats the owner that both are arrested when the cops arrive. Andy scoops up the dog and takes him to the Tara Foundation, the dog rescue organization that’s always been his true passion. Meanwhile, at the police station, the passerby is identified as Matthew Jantzen, and he’s wanted for murder. Andy and Laurie are struck by the fact that Jantzen, a man on the run, would nevertheless intervene to help a dog, and decide to find out more. Dog Eat Dog, the twenty-second installment in the Andy Carpenter series, features the charming cast of characters - old and new - that David Rosenfelt is known for and the dogs that accompany them.
Poetry. Prose. WHAT IT TOOK FOR TO ME TO GET HERE is an anthology of poetry and prose written by young people who participated in the San Francisco WritersCorps 1998-1999 program. It is edited by the San Francisco WritersCorps, with an introduction by Dorothy Allison and photographs by Rick Rocamora. WritersCorps has provided these young people with the care and consideration it takes to foster a love for story and a value in one's own worth. As a result, they have created a vivid version of the life. Now, anyone can come along. Anyone can understand. The writings in WHAT IT TOOK FOR ME TO GET HERE are beginnings, road maps to the future-- Dorothy Allison. San Francisco WritersCorps is a city community service that transforms individuals and communities through the written word. This is its fifth anthology.