Ballerina Art Print, On Pointe Watercolor Print, Ballet Painting Art, Ballerina Legs In Pointe Shoes, Ballet Wall Fine Art Print - Free Shipping

Direct from the Artist!Fine Art Print from Original Painting by CanotStopBallerina art print, on pointe watercolor print, ballet painting art, ballerina legs in pointe shoes, ballet wall fine art printPRINT DETAILS: printed on Epson art printer specialised in museum quality printing, on heavy weight archival (acid free, special coated, non-yellowing) paper. Each art print is a reproduction of my original one of a kind artwork.SIZES: please choose from the drop menu. There are standard inches sizes and A-sizes also. Custom sizes are available too, please contact me for quotation.Signed and dated on the back.Signed on topNot framed and not matted.All prints are gift wrapped in a cellophane insert and cardboard support to best protect,sizes of 11x14'' and above are shipped rolled in protective tube.For more Art Prints from my paintings your are welcome to take a look at:www.etsy.com/shop/CanotStopPrintsFor Original Paintings please check:www.etsy.com/shop/CanotStopThank you for interest,Sophie

In fact, this is one of the stories about favorite holiday keepsakes that several readers agreed to share with us. They are a reminder once again that, regardless of the weather, warm feelings abound in December. After all, it’s easy to bask in the season of love. “On the side of one box is the original price of 15 cents (and that’s not from a yard sale), and each has flimsy cardboard separators for a dozen, machine-blown glass ornaments.” Shiny Brite Glass Christmas ornaments, the name used by Max Eckardt and Sons Inc., were produced at the Corning Glass Company and sold by Woolworths, beginning in the 1930s.

“My parents must have purchased their holiday ornaments in the ballerina art print, on pointe watercolor print, ballet painting art, ballerina legs in pointe shoes, ballet wall fine art print mid to late ’40s, and they were used each year on their tree and now, on mine, “I have preserved many of the originals, easily identifiable by their shape and quality–though some were lost in the proverbial fallen-tree tragedy, Each year I look forward to opening the boxes, which are more than a bit tattered, They’re held together by tape in places, but are still able to hold a dozen ornaments each as well as lots of memories.”..

Maybe that early flair helped spark Gage’s current career path. Earlier this month she completed her Blackbird Tavern jazz residency downtown, a three-month program set up by restaurateurs/arts activists Chris Esparza and Brendan Rawson to showcase young talent. This summer, Gage was also an inaugural recipient of a Leigh Weimers emerging artist award, established by the Rotary Club of San Jose in honor of the late Mercury News columnist. “My favorite decoration is a clay angel that I painted in elementary school,” Gage says. “Of course, one of the wings has broken off, and it gives a ‘punk’ character to the ornament–kind of like me when I was a child, quite a punk!”.

In addition to the ornament display from the Gage kids’ wonder years, she celebrates the season with an “artsy tree” at her college house at San Jose State: “We have ballerina art print, on pointe watercolor print, ballet painting art, ballerina legs in pointe shoes, ballet wall fine art print a fake ficus where we make ornaments out of paper snowflakes, It’s a fun way to use up our recycled paper, like old school quizzes.”, The red-robed quintet are placed on the mantel every Christmas along with two vintage elves (“and I just bought another one, but that’s enough for now”), “I put them out the day after Thanksgiving every year,” says Urbisci with a laugh..

Adams recalls that his grandfather, Harold Edward “Skip” Adams, who died in November 2012, was “quite a stud.” A decorated Marine who served at the Battle of Iwo Jima during World War II, the senior Adams was a longtime ceramic tile layer and business agent for the local Tile Layers Union. He was also the father of Brian Adams, vice president for advancement at Bellarmine College Preparatory. Nicholas Adams says his grandmother, Pauline, was “the life of the party who loved to dance. He considered her the “anti-grandma–an incredible woman and confidante.”.

The teddy bear may be the sentimental favorite, but Adams now has a new love: a wooden sign that used to hang above the wishing well at Christmas in the Park, Dating back to about the early 1980s, according to CIP executive director Jason Minsky, the sign had been donated to Discover San Jose, a new downtown retailer, About a month ago, “I happened to be walking past and saw it in the window,” Adams says, He snapped ballerina art print, on pointe watercolor print, ballet painting art, ballerina legs in pointe shoes, ballet wall fine art print it up and plans to incorporate it in his living room Christmas décor every year, “It’s a neat bit of history and has great meaning for me, When we were kids we would go see Ballet San Jose’s Nutcracker, then visit Christmas in the Park and get hot chocolate, I never miss opening night now; it’s something I look forward to.”..

The Demarcos, who were wed in 1964, moved into their present home in 1966. They now have two daughters and five grandchildren. When the holy figurines–augmented with greenery, gold stars, twinkling lights and a silk runner–are arranged each year, “We always make sure the wise men and the camel are on the east side,” Linda says. Now the Nativity is the “heart of our Christmas. It was a present for our first Christmas and meant a great deal to my mother-in-law to see it displayed. We’re very traditional and try to carry on this tradition. It will be something my grandchildren will remember.”.

Another treasure in her collection is similarly fragile and was probably made in the late 19th century, The glass ornament with a half moon face belonged to Paull’s mother, It still bears wax drippings from the days when candles were lit in the Christmas tree, Adams, who has lived in San Jose almost 50 years, also crafts tiny room settings, vignettes and items like the fully decorated 10-inch Christmas tree that sits under a dome, Perhaps her crowning achievement, however, is a 5-foot tall doll house that ballerina art print, on pointe watercolor print, ballet painting art, ballerina legs in pointe shoes, ballet wall fine art print sits year-round on a table in the dining room, Naturally, it’s filled with adorable miniatures she’s either collected or made, and it’s currently decked out in its holiday finery..



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