Go forth and fill your libraries with media.
Seriously, thanks to everyone for being so amazing and patient. You are the reason I love Vox.
Originally the topic was Technology In Action. which seemed a good Idea at the time. However once we got out with our cameras the `in action' part proved more difficult to portray than anticipated. We cut the topic back to just Technology with a restriction being put on computers, since a previous topic had covered our computers. The submissions have proved to be of the usual high standard from our club members.
I was just told that the Amazon Conduit will be fixed by tomorrow. I will post here as soon as I get word that it's back up and running.
I know this has been frustrating and I am sorry there wasn't more I could do to make it less so. I really appreciate your patience though.
Cheers,
Bad news. As many of you have probably noticed, the Amazon Conduit was not fixed in the last week's release. Unfortunately, there was an undetected bug that is preventing the conduit from working.
We are working on this bug fix and hope to have the Conduit back up and running this week.
I will keep you posted.
Thank you for being so patient.
Blog Action Day is every October 15th, when blogger are asked to post something about a single issue to show our strength and conviction as an online community. It's a great way to feel connected to the greater good, and the participation of so many bloggers to support the world's leading non-profit organizations is something you can do to help, right now. By blogging today, you're supporting some of the world's leading non-profits and sharing your voice for change.
This year's topic is climate change, and we'd love to read your thoughts on the topic. If you participate, leave us a link to your post in the comments, so we know to check out your post!
Go to www.blogactionday.org to learn more, get a badge for your blog showing your participation, and see some ideas for your post on climate change.
Can't wait to read your posts!
~ daisy
A little over a year ago, I started participating in a round robin group on LiveJournal. For those that might not know, a round robin quilt is made by a group of quilters who make a center block, and pass the block off to another quilter in the round, who then puts a border on it, and passes the quilt to the next person. So if you have a 5-person group, there are five quilts being made, and after the fifth round, the quilt returns to the person who did the center block.
Well, the quilt top came back to me sometime in late July or August, and I added a final border to make it a good "couch quilt" for me to snuggle under in the winter. There it sat for a while, while I figured out how I was going to quilt the thing. Now it's done, and I'm happy with it. Happy enough to enter it in a local guild show in November. I call it "Horsin' Around" from the Laurel Birch horse fabric used in the quilt.
I tried a few different quilting styles in each of the borders. The outside border is quilted with a neolithic horse outline that is a combination of art I've seen in photographs in the Lascaux caves in France, and the Laurel Birch horse fabrics that are used in the quilt.