Early American - Americana extra-large print cross stitch pattern by Cross Stitch Collectibles Finished Sizes (approximate) 14 count: 28.5" x 17.5" 18 count: 22.25" x 13.5" 22 count: 18.25" x 11.25" Stitches: 400w x 245h Pattern Features * Extra-Large-print for easy reading * Full cross stitches only * Black/White chart with easy-to-read symbols * Comprehensive instruction sheet * Complete materials list included Benefits of Large-Print Cross Stitch Patterns: This book is an "Extra-Large-Print" cross stitch pattern. Stitching our beautiful cross stitch patterns is a labor of love and very time-consuming. Reading such large patterns for hours at a time can pose a challenge for stitchers of all ages. The large grids and alphabetic symbols used in this cross stitch pattern book makes tackling such a large project much easier and more enjoyable. Founded in 1998, Cross Stitch Collectibles specializes in high quality cross stitch reproductions of fine art paintings by the Great Masters, including Italian Renaissance, Impressionist, Pre-Raphaelite, Asian, Fractal art, and many more styles. You will find something to love and cherish in our vast collection. Cross stitch your own masterpiece today!! ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Kathleen George is the founder of Cross Stitch Collectibles, and designer of more than 5,000 fine art counted cross stitch patterns since 1998. She recreates the world's most recognized and acclaimed masterpiece paintings in cross stitch, and was instrumental to the introduction and popularity of the international phenomenon of designing boldly-colored fractal cross stitch patterns, which have become a rapidly growing niche among cross stitch enthusiasts world-wide. Born in Pennsylvania, Kathleen now resides and works in Henderson, NV.
This book crosses colonial boundaries to show how Ingle's Rebellion, Fendall's Rebellion, Bacon's Rebellion, Culpeper's Rebellion, Parson Waugh's Tumult, and the colonial Glorious Revolution were episodes in a single struggle because they ...
Klapper, August, The Printer in Eighteenth-Century Williamsburg (Williamsburg, 1964). Payne, Lloyd, The Miller in Eighteenth-Century Virginia (Williamsburg, 1958). Prime, Alfred C., The Arts and Crafts in Philadelphia, Maryland, ...
Debates over the rights of indigent transients to participate in either form of so-called membership—territorial or civic—generally concluded that citizenship was a laurel to be earned rather than a recognition of participation.
They won't have to be handled as much as other compilations of this kind, because readers will not have to shuttle back and forth from popular names to formal given names. If you want to look up Billy the Kid, find him under that name, ...
Bradford the printer took their side and published the appeal . The Lloydian's promptly arrested him and charged him with unlicensed use of the press . His type and press were confiscated . Another Keithian , John McComb , was charged ...
The family works tirelessly to prepare for the holiday: decorating the house, hand-dipping candles, baking mounds of delicious cookies, and carving nativity pieces.
But the real star of this volume is Lewis herself: confident, unconventional, erudite, and deeply imaginative.
Much econometric literature seems to downplay exclusion , discrimination , and exploitation in setting the contours of the labor market . See Robert Margo , Wages and Labor Markets in the United States , 1820–1860 ( Chicago : University ...
Ten leading scholars of early American social history here examine the nature of work and labor in America from 1614 to 1820. The authors scrutinize work diaries, private and public records, and travelers' accounts.
Given the programmatic rethinking of elementary literacy instruction, the map became a product of alphabetic learning. Indeed, as the basic principles of literacy (the alphabet, representational sign systems, phonetics) became ...