Making WET

Making WET
Author: Leonard Koren
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2012
Genre: Design
ISBN: 9780981484624

WET was one of the seminal avant-garde magazines of the 1970s. Matt Groening and others got their start here.

Sew Very Easy Quilt Favorites

Sew Very Easy Quilt Favorites
Author: Laura Coia
Publisher: C&T Publishing Inc
Total Pages: 67
Release: 2020-03-25
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 1617459267

Learn quilting basics from a YouTube sensation and practice your skills with 12 fun projects suitable for all skill levels. Her instructional videos have inspired thousands to start sewing. Now for the first time, sew-lebrity Laura Coia shares written patterns for the most loved video tutorials on her “Sew Very Easy” YouTube channel! Learn the basics of quilt making, from cutting and pressing to borders and finishing. Then practice your skills with a dozen beautiful projects—quilts you’ll come back to time and time again—all suitable for beginners and beyond.

Wet Felting

Wet Felting
Author: Natasha Smart
Publisher: The Crowood Press
Total Pages: 623
Release: 2022-04-25
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 0719840406

Wet felting is an incredible textile art form that offers enormous opportunity for genuine creativity and innovation. This beautiful book is a complete guide to the process, from the basic techniques through to using embellishment materials to decorate your felt and resists to structure it. There are step-by-step instructions to nine projects, plus ideas for variations and an introduction to an innovative felting ball to create fully 3D-felted forms. Packed with practical advice throughout, this is truly a book to inspire your creativity and to guide you in the potential of this wonderful art form.

The New Healthy Bread in Five Minutes a Day

The New Healthy Bread in Five Minutes a Day
Author: Jeff Hertzberg, M.D.
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 474
Release: 2016-11
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 1250077559

From the authors of Healthy Bread in Five Minutes a Day comes an updated cookbook filled with new recipes for healthy bread, using the same quick and easy baking method.

Complete Feltmaking

Complete Feltmaking
Author: Gillian Harris
Publisher: Macmillan
Total Pages: 170
Release: 2007-04-17
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 9780312366261

25 projects and instructions for felting.

Prison Ramen

Prison Ramen
Author: Clifton Collins
Publisher: Workman Publishing
Total Pages: 177
Release: 2015-11-03
Genre: Cooking
ISBN: 0761185526

A unique and edgy cookbook, Prison Ramen takes readers behind bars with more than 65 ramen recipes and stories of prison life from the inmate/cooks who devised them, including celebrities like Slash from Guns n’ Roses and the actor Shia LaBeouf. Instant ramen is a ubiquitous food, beloved by anyone looking for a cheap, tasty bite—including prisoners, who buy it at the commissary and use it as the building block for all sorts of meals. Think of this as a unique cookbook of ramen hacks. Here’s Ramen Goulash. Black Bean Ramen. Onion Tortilla Ramen Soup. The Jailhouse Hole Burrito. Orange Porkies—chili ramen plus white rice plus ½ bag of pork skins plus orange-flavored punch. Ramen Nuggets. Slash’s J-Walking Ramen (with scallions, Sriracha hot sauce, and minced pork). Coauthors Gustavo “Goose” Alvarez and Clifton Collins Jr. are childhood friends—one an ex-con, now free and living in Mexico, and the other a highly successful Hollywood character actor who’s enlisted friends and celebrities to contribute their recipes and stories. Forget flowery writing about precious, organic ingredients—these stories are a first-person, firsthand look inside prison life, a scared-straight reality to complement the offbeat recipes.

Chemical Pictures the Wet Plate Collodion Book

Chemical Pictures the Wet Plate Collodion Book
Author: Quinn Jacobson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2013-03-25
Genre: Ambrotype
ISBN: 9781482659948

This book covers everything you need to know about wet-plate collodion photography. Quinn teaches you how to make direct positive images on glass and metal plates; Ambrotypes, Tintypes, and Alumitypes.

Wet Brain

Wet Brain
Author: Mark C. Hull
Publisher: Author House
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2011-07-06
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1456753282

Toby Sinclair is convinced there is a killer in his future-lethal, amoral, vicious-not to mention highly elusive since Toby continues to remain alive and unharmed despite his fears. When he is pressured by his only friend to help a drifter bury a steamer trunk in the middle of the woods, a drifter who flaunts his abusive habits, Toby is satisfied that he has found his murderer. It is a fact that both alarms, and in a strange way, fulfills him. His prediction about his own fate is compromised when he realizes that instead of becoming a victim he finds himself to be an accomplice to whatever is hidden in the buried steamer trunk. To be cleared of the suspicion he must endure a parade of strange characters, high-octane spirits, absurd situations and his own struggle between loyalty and justice. "Wet Brain" is a novel that borrows the skin of empty paranoia and creates the farcical face of a man vexed at his failure to properly succumb to his own destructive destiny.

Freedom Libraries

Freedom Libraries
Author: Mike Selby
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2019-10-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1538115549

Freedom Libraries: The Untold Story of Libraries for African-Americans in the South. As the Civil Rights Movement exploded across the United States, the media of the time was able to show the rest of the world images of horrific racial violence. And while some of the bravest people of the 20th century risked their lives for the right to simply order a cheeseburger, ride a bus, or use a clean water fountain, there was another virtually unheard of struggle—this one for the right to read. Although illegal, racial segregation was strictly enforced in a number of American states, and public libraries were not immune. Numerous libraries were desegregated on paper only: there would be no cards given to African-Americans, no books for them read, and no furniture for them to use. It was these exact conditions that helped create Freedom Libraries. Over eighty of these parallel libraries appeared in the Deep South, staffed by civil rights voter registration workers. While the grassroots nature of the libraries meant they varied in size and quality, all of them created the first encounter many African-Americans had with a library. Terror, bombings, and eventually murder would be visited on the Freedom Libraries—with people giving up their lives so others could read a library book. This book delves into how these libraries were the heart of the Civil Rights Movement, and the remarkable courage of the people who used them. They would forever change libraries and librarianship, even as they helped the greater movement change the society these libraries belonged to. Photographs of the libraries bring this little-known part of American history to life.