Sew La Ti Embroidery [Search results for clock

  • Architectural luxury Fiji

    Architectural luxury Fiji

    Sonaisali Island

    Sonaisali Island Resort — magnificent hotel on lonely island. But it is not necessary to miss here — set of entertainments, the fine nature, and the main thing — the warm emerald sea — all it at your order.

    Hotel from the Australian architects

    The hotel has opened in 1992, it is constructed in traditions of Fijian architecture which so is harmoniously entered in a surrounding landscape. The resort consists of the general premises and a bungalow, shaded by magnificent tropical vegetation. At hotel restaurants it is offered to the menu, made under the influence of Asian, Indian and an European cuisine.

    The freshest components are used only, vegetables and fruit are grown up there and then, on island. Also probably to arrange a romantic supper for two at a stellar light, under silent whisper of ocean waves.

    Fiji Resort

    Arrangement: at 4 o'clock flight from Sydney, at 3 o'clock flight from Oakland, at 10 o'clock flight from Los Angeles, in 3 minutes of driving from island Viti Levu.
    The hotel is designed by the Sydney architect, therefore, you to the full like the Australian aesthetics and up to the end will understand local mentality.

    In hotel: 2 restaurants, a bar, a car rent and bicycles, shops, excursions, business centre, exchange, transfers from/in the airport, a laundry, a first-aid post, trading gallery from 3 large shops and several boutiques.

    The Conference hall offers ample opportunities for carrying out of private meetings, trainings, conferences and seminars. The club for children works daily from 9 o'clock in the morning to 9 o'clock in the evening and offers the whole complex of entertainments for children from 4 till 12 years. In hotel there is a service of co-ordinators (wedding, on the organisation of meetings, on work with the Japanese clients, on work with groups).

    Restaurants and bars:
    — Restaurant Sunset Terrace.
    — Restaurant The Plantation.

    Sonaisali Resort

    Sports and entertainments: tennis, riding, driving by boats, fishing, a water ski, a paintball, billiards-pool, the TV with the big screen in foyer, tables for Ping-Pong and board games, trips on jungle on motorcycles.

    Residential architect Sydney — knows true sense in the Australian culture and is always ready to offer original architectural projects.

    Fiji Resort

    VIA «Architectural luxury Fiji»

  • New interpretation of wall clocks

    New interpretation of wall clocks

    Wall clock

    The designer from Hong Kong Leo Yiu has suggested to change a little representation of inhabitants about what should be wall clocks in office and official bodies.

    Nextime has bought the patent

    The manufacturer of clocks company Nextime with pleasure has got at the designer idea of a dial with the cut off lateral part which allows to suspend conveniently them to a direct plane.

    Unusual clock

    Office clocks

    Clocks for office

    VIA «New interpretation of wall clocks»

  • Week 3 done!

    Week 3 done!
    Sewing
    .Sorry for the bad picture, what can I say it's 11 o'clock at night.
    I was too excited not to post it before I put it in stacks to start sewing together.
    Week 3 is done for Dana's quilt along! I wasn't sure if I would get it done in time, I really don't want to get behind. Looking at the picture I may switch a couple blocks around.
    I am getting even more excited about this quilt, I absolutely adore it!
    It is one happy quilt!
  • The New York City Heavy Music Coallition

    The New York City Heavy Music Coallition
    ©On Saturday, June 18, 2011, history was written at Webster Hall (The Ritz) at the No Remission "Through Blackened Skies" record release show. When we arrived at the venue at 4 o'clock to conduct interviews for an upcoming DVD that showcases the state of the New York City Heavy Music scene, the sun was shining and everyone was really pumped about this very special night for the entire community. After chatting with some of the bands and with some key figures from the scene, it was time for Left In Ruins to do what they do best: deliver a crushing display of brutal Metal filled of very technical guitar parts and positive energy!
    After grabbing a few beers and greeting the crowd, the surprise of the night took center stage. Arcane Malevolence performed a highly energetic set and got the pit initiated for the storm that was about to unravel at Webster Hall. After a few minutes of peace inside the pit, Alekhine's Gun melted everyone's faces with their furious flavor of Heavy Metal! Goddamn, these guys are getting good and sounding tighter and tighter. The sense of unity that this band possesses is a message that is transmitted to the pit army that stands strong whenever they step on a stage.
    Closing this historical night was No Remission who presented New York City with their brand new album titled "Through Blackened Skies" (Click to read our album review), we had personally seen this band live and they impressed the hell out of our ears. The band not only possesses great stage presence and highly technical songs, but they play each song with balls and make the pit army lose their minds!
    At the end of the night the dance floor had a lot of blood, sweat and tears, and a lot of happy people! What is going in New York City right now with Heavy Music is blood rushing and extremely exciting. We can't wait to see the DVD which will include every bands performance and plenty of interviews! Stay tuned horns up throwers!
    Related links:
    TICKETS
    No Remission
    Alekhine's Gun
    Left In Ruins
    Arcane Malevolence

    VIA The New York City Heavy Music Coallition

  • How to Select an Industrial Vacuum Cleaner?

    How to Select an Industrial Vacuum Cleaner?

    The Vacuum Cleaners


    It's the Real Vacuum Cleaners!

    The industrial vacuum cleaners are a universal equipment by definition for the industry buildings. For industrial cleaners there is nothing impossible: they do not have restrictions and a narrow orientation on gathering of certain sorts of a garbage and a dust, and also duration of the operating mode.

    But, before you will buy an industrial vacuum cleaners, look for these recommendations:
    • Universality of a hoover: good industrial hoovers without problems will cope with any garbage and a dust. Including a problem garbage (water, polymeric powder paint, detergent powders and solutions, plaster, cement etc.) and also standard (sawdust, glass, sand, small rubble, an abrasive dust etc.).
    • Quality of the filtering system (it's especially important in the light of universality). I recommend the equipment with the mechanical vertical filter: because they prolong life of usual filters and provides high-quality clean-out of air. The filters of last step of clean-out should be low-cost and accessible.
    • Reliability. The metal case is more reliable than plastic — you after all do not hope for careful hands of your brigade of a prof-cleaners.
    • The operating mode — continuous, round-the-clock. Even if you do not plan to spend the day and the night on a building object.

    VIA «How to Select an Industrial Vacuum Cleaner?»

  • Nepal: In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake

    Nepal: In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    Swayambhunath — also known as the Monkey Temple, for its holy, furry dwellers that swing from the rosewood trees — is one of the oldest and most sacred Buddhist sites in Nepal's Kathmandu Valley, an important pilgrimage destination for Hindus as well as Buddhists. It was also one of the worst damaged by last month's earthquake.

    In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    Buddhist monks recover a statue of a Buddhist deity from a monastery 
    at Swayambhunath [Credit: Niranjan Shrestha/AP]

    At the site, Nepali police soldiers shovel broken bricks and sand into garbage baskets. They're much more cautious cleaning up here than at many other devastated places: There's a chance they could still find precious, centuries-old statues and other artifacts in the rubble.

    Volunteers stand precariously atop a two-story-high pile of crumbled bricks, scouring it for relics. A temple nearby, part of the site's hilltop complex, has big cracks and looks like it could topple and crush them at any minute.

    This is dangerous, important work, says Nepal's undersecretary of the Department of Archaeology, Suresh Shrestha, who's peeled off his dust mask and is taking a break in the shade.

    "There are so many artifacts because in Hinduism and Buddhism, there are lots and lots of gods and goddesses," he says.

    Nepal's government says at least 70 ancient, sacred sites in the Kathmandu Valley were severely damaged or destroyed by the earthquake. The area is home to seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites; Swayambhunath is one of them.

    With help from the United Nations, every ancient object that's found intact at the site from now on will be inventoried and stored in a secure place to protect from looters. Archaeologists fear that in the chaos following the quake, some artifacts were lost or stolen.

    In Nepal, efforts underway to salvage ancient sites damaged by quake
    A Buddhist monk picks through a damaged monastery near the 
    Swayambhunath stupa [Credit: Niranjan Shrestha/AP]

    The oldest structure there, a Buddhist monument known as a stupa, dates from the fifth century. "It is intact," says Christian Manhart, UNESCO's country representative for Nepal. "We are lucky."

    Manhart says it's difficult to know at this point how much of the Swayambhunath complex can be restored. But, he says, "I'm rather optimistic. We have all these architectural features like sculptures, carved wooden beams, cornerstones, which can be reused for construction."

    Despite the damage, the most sacred rituals are continuing — including worship five times a day.

    "We have [a] very big problem, but we do not stop the praying," says Ashok Buddhacharya, a priest who says his family roots at the temple extend back to the fifth century. "Ritual praying is continuing."

    Buddhacharya sits on a mat underneath a large, blue tarp. It's where he and his wife and children and other families are cooking and sleeping, since their living quarters here were reduced to rubble.

    "These are historical, more than 1,000 years old, the stupas, the metal things, the statues," he says. "We cannot make a repeat, you see."

    That is, they can't just rebuild them.

    That's why archaeologists feel a sense of urgency, here and at other sites, as they work around the clock to recover what they can.

    Author: Kirk Siegler | Source: NPR [May 03, 2015]

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