Chủ Nhật, 16 tháng 7, 2017

Waching daily Jul 16 2017

SOLVANG TINY HOUSE (282 SQ FT)

For more infomation >> Solvang Tiny House (282 Sq Ft) | Tiny House Design Ideas | Le Tuan Home Design - Duration: 1:44.

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Coi cấm cười - Hài tổng hợp đặc sắc nhất 2017 - hài cười bể bụng - Duration: 20:31.

For more infomation >> Coi cấm cười - Hài tổng hợp đặc sắc nhất 2017 - hài cười bể bụng - Duration: 20:31.

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Musik Livestream | Breexyz - Duration: 4:27.

For more infomation >> Musik Livestream | Breexyz - Duration: 4:27.

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BREAKING: Clinton Foundation Witness Found DEAD In Hotel Room | Top Stories Today - Duration: 2:24.

This might come as a surprise to some, but other people knew that Hillary Clinton has

a "hidden" body count.

Someone new just got added to her list of victims.

Klaus Eberwein is a former Haitian government official.

Coincidently, he was visiting the United States so that he could testify AGAINST Clinton and

her foundation for corruption.

Guess what?

He was found DEAD in Miami with a gunshot wound to the head.

(via WND).

The death was ruled as a suicide.

On that same note, according to World Net Daily, Eberwein told his friends and family

that he feared for his life because he was stepping up to uncovered the Clinton Foundation.

The former Haitian official was set to go and talk to the Haitian Senate Ethics and

Anti-Corruption Commission on Tuesday.

The topic of discussion seemed a little hazy, but one of the points that was clarified was

the fact the Clinton Foundation took a lot of money for the Haitian earthquake yet gave

little to the citizens who needed it.

How much might you ask?

Well according to Eberwein, a mere 0.6% of received donations was handed over from the

Clinton Foundation.

9.6% ended up in the hands of the Haitian government.

A stunning 89.8%, which breaks down to $5.4 billion, was handed out from within the Clinton

Foundation and funneled where it needed to go.

The corruption in the Clinton Foundation is evident, especially after $5 billion was held

beack from the survivors of a disastrous earthquake.

Eberwein has spoken up in the past too.

He protested outside of Manhattan and stated that "The Clinton Foundation, they are criminals,

they are thieves, they are liars, they are a disgrace."

The Clinton Foundation and Hillary need to be exposed once and for all.

They are all vile human beings who only care about money and how they can get more of it

at the cost of however many lives it takes.

We need to put our foot down and expose this madness.

Hillary might try to take people out one on one, but she can't take us all on!

There needs to be justice for Eberwein!

Do YOU think the Clinton's are assassinating people who don't agree with them or threaten

to expose them?

please share this news and tell us what you think.

For more infomation >> BREAKING: Clinton Foundation Witness Found DEAD In Hotel Room | Top Stories Today - Duration: 2:24.

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PATRICK. NO. - Duration: 0:22.

PATRICK. NO!

PATRICK

GRAB IT PAT, GRAB IT. HURRY. HURRY.

GET IT PAT. GET IT GET IT

FINE here's ya damn chips

Wanna bite?

For more infomation >> PATRICK. NO. - Duration: 0:22.

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Aşk-ı Memnu (Zakazana Miłość) Napisy PL Ep. 61 FULL HD - Duration: 1:25:09.

For more infomation >> Aşk-ı Memnu (Zakazana Miłość) Napisy PL Ep. 61 FULL HD - Duration: 1:25:09.

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8 Strategies to getting a girlfriend - Duration: 2:22.

For more infomation >> 8 Strategies to getting a girlfriend - Duration: 2:22.

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How to clean gold and silver jewelry clean and do it yourself - Duration: 3:31.

Hi, guys welcome back to my channel at the Eugene Vaughan show in today's video

I'm going to show you how to clean your jewelry yout silver and gold jewelry with a product you will not

but it could be reachable at the

supermarket and the drugstore

keeping on watching!

I know it's quite hard to get rid of the

stains in gold and silver jewelry but here I have a 15 minute home made solution

It's very very easy and safe for you and your jewelry

So if you're ready to see the process wait for it because I'm about to start

And if you like this video remember to hit the like button subscribe and invite your friends come join watch this out!

This is denture cleanser

Take one tab open it up

Take one tab and here there is an important thing

I'll show you a detail

The tab is green and blue, first it will turn out into blue and when all i s ready it will turn out into green

Put it into water, let it sit

And now take your earrings your rings and your necklaces

with stains...

Put them into the blue water

wait for 15 minutes and

As I said here the blue water turn out into green which means that all is ready

with a toothbrush brush your jewelry

of silver and gold to make sure that you will get rid of all the products

And now rinse the denture cleanser and put the jewelry into clear water

Give it a last brush just make sure that all was removed

and then dry your jewelry with a towel

All set and ready to shine

I'm just also sharing with you other home cleanser solutions

that you can do by yourself at home in order to clean your jewelry the thing is that the denture cleanser

works very well and is best for me

Because you know

you just let it sit and then after 15 minutes you come back and all is completely clean

Well guys that was it for today if you like this video remember to hit the like button,

subscribe and invite more friends and make sure that you are always going to be

tuned at the Eugene Vauchan SHow. See ya on the next video.

For more infomation >> How to clean gold and silver jewelry clean and do it yourself - Duration: 3:31.

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Ben Walter feat. Ashley Apollodor - Already Dying [Lyrics CC] - Duration: 4:52.

Lead me out of the dark I don't know how far I can go

Alone

Leave me here Don't save me

I'm already dying

There's nothing you can do now

We're going down

All we have to do

Is try and fight our way Into the light

One more time

Leave me to die

I'll be alright, baby boy Just leave me alone

Just go back home I'm okay

Goodbye

Goodbye

I'm left out in the dark

There's no way out

I'm left out in the dark

There's no way out from here

Leave me to die

I know what's right

I don't need nobody else's side

Leave me to lie

One last time

Just close your eyes

Clear your mind

Leave me in the dark I will be just fine

No amount of art Could ever kill my vibe

For more infomation >> Ben Walter feat. Ashley Apollodor - Already Dying [Lyrics CC] - Duration: 4:52.

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Co architekci nawarzyli w Starym Browarze? | Architecture is a good idea - Duration: 15:45.

"Stary Browar" (Old Brewery) shopping centre has been opened in 2003

Right away it won numerous awards,

and on a significant exhibition at the Centre for Contemporary Art in Warsaw three years later

it's been proclaimed an icon of new Polish architecture.

A few weeks ago we asked the creator of Stary Browar, Grażyna Kulczyk

why did she choose to invest here

in a century-old former brewery

And she replied that in might be easier to buy an empty plot and develop it,

but something draws her to such old places, where one can feel history.

These buildings are filled with emotions, joys and sorrows

of the generations of people who used them.

There you can not only build on just a plot of land,

but also upon these emotions.

I must admit that I was impressed with these words

becouse they sound beautiful and very romantic.

But how to turn this romantic vision into architectural reality?

Let's see what architects from ADS Studio brewed in Stary Browar.

First of all, let's face the truth:

shopping centres are hardly ever buildings with any aesthetic value.

Usually they are simply shoddy

both in terms of architectural disposition and choosen materials.

They are designed as a plastic substitute for real city

But they mimic the city as successful

as an aquarium mimics the ocean.

They are cheap and showy.

In addtion to that, shopping centres often are like islands,

isolated from the rest of the city, surrounded by a sea of parking spaces,

completely self-centered.

The goal there is to create fully controlled, enclosed space

that does not complement the sourrounding but competes with it.

So why is it worth to turn attention to Stary Browar?

Right now I'm walking down Półwiejska street, which is one of the main shopping streets in Poznań.

It's here that Stary Browar is located.

At the very first glimpse one can see that it's a very big building.

But architects have weakend its scale by dividing it into smaller portions

that don't overwhelm as much.

Apart from that, Stary Browar is not only a shopping centre but it is a mixed-use building.

First phase, which we see right now, has an area of around 34,000 square meters

of which around 5,000 are office space.

They are partially situated in this separete building.

On the ground floor of this building there's a shop accessible not from the shopping mall alley

but only directly from the street,

which is completely diffrent than it is usually done in Polish shopping malls.

This offset of two buildings creates something that can be called an urban opening.

The street space opens up to the green of the park.

Thanks to that this two spaces -

rather formal of the street and laidback or recreational of the park,

can slightly mix with each other.

After a few steps we reach the characteristic corner of the building

that has become the symbol of Stary Browar.

But to me it's something more than just a symbol of a shopping mall

because this is a sign in space marking the beginning of a promenade

leading to the historic old town.

In a way Stary Browar is an attempt to connect things

that developers of shopping sentres often find contradictory.

On the one hand strictly commercial demands of a shopping mall,

but onthe other hand - building the facade of the street,

an attempt to create an urban fabric,

interesting urban openings, enrichment of the sourrandings.

The story of Stary Browar is a story about reconciliation of contradictions,

mixing contrasts, which this building is full of.

Let's take a closer look.

Second contradiction that the authors of Stary Browar wanted to reconcile

is even written in its name: Stary Browar 5050

50% of business

and 50% of art and culture

It's difficult to find two more opposing worlds - commerce and art

but Stary Browar is probably the only shopping centre in Poland

that deserves a popular name - shopping gallery

because there are a lot of shops, the commercial spirit is everywhere

but also, everywhere here you can find artworks

So this is both - shopping mall and art gallery

There are such a monumental pieces like this - classic Igor Mitoraj sculpture

but artworks also appear in less obvious places

there is a bench, which is also a work of art

another sculptures by Igor Mitoraj appear on the walls above the second floor

In addition to theat, there are also artworks that don't look like ones

like these enclosures of reinforced concrete pillars painted by Leon Tarasewicz

Another non-obvious combination - functionality and decorativness

Functionality in shopping malls is a complex and unusal topic

In general - not always things that common people use to concider as functional

are seen as functional and desired by developers and managers of shopping centres.

Let's take this corridor, for example.

It is sort of a backstage of shopping mall,

it connects two spaces, and from here you will find the entrance to the restrooms and staff entrence to the restaurants

So, from a shopping mall manager point of view,

nothing here should invite people to stay longer than necessary

There is no sense investing a lot of money here

Because there are no shopwindows

so people won't make their shopping decisions here.

And yet, this place in Stary Browar was treated exceptionally decoratively

or even theatrically.

This space has been deisgned by a stage designer Ryszard Kaja

He designed something that not only looks interestingly

but also he devised another way of collecting that we find here.

Of course we've seen a collection of works of art

But there are more collections here.

For example there's an instalation made of bicycle wheels.

Ane these probably are pieces of bicycles

used by workers of the former brewery to get to work.

On this wall there is a collection of old signs, found in various places in the brewery.

They are treated like a reliquary or a shrine

to testify of the history of the place.

But this collecting appears in even more ways here. Sometimes somewhat peculiar.

Stary Browar is a collection of buildings - old and new.

A collection of spaces.

But also a collection of various trends in contemporary, post-modern architecture.

These trends are clearly visible in the Atrium

On the one hand there is this common understanding of post-modernism.

Clear, characteristic, obvious references to the history of architecture.

Here it is a reference to 9th century industrial architecture.

For example like purely decorative metal columns,

looking exactly like the ones we find in old industrial revolution era factories.

Over them is a curved brick wall

a direct reference also to industrial buildings of the past, but of course it's completely new.

And over it sits the roof.

And this roof represents a completely different trend in post-modern architecture, namely:

high-tech.

Because this roof resemples rather a sci-fi movie space ship from a distant future,

than a roof over a shopping mall.

And this is one of the most interesing issues, not only here in Stary Browar, but also generally in contemporary architecture.

How to reconcile this contradiction: old and new.

How to bring together the past and the present on architecture.

How does Stary Browar's attitude toward it's past and it's historic buildings look?

Variosly, sometimes very freely.

This can be best seen here, on the Courtyard of Art., this is the heart of Stary Browar

We are in front of the old industrial buildings of the Huggers' Brewery

And for example this chimney is now, how it was before.

In the past it showed the location of the brewery form afar.

And chimney os a classic feature of industrial revolution era cityscape.

Today it marks the location of the chopping centre inside the old brewery.

But other old, 19th century buildings, were treated more freely.

They were partly rearranged, for example in terms of window alignemnt.

Others have been demolished and rebuilt, or demolished and the bricks which were

their frabric was used in other places throughout the shopping centre.

And finally some buildings, like this one

were constructed completely new, but are stylized to resemble

old, 19th century industrial architecture.

So this division between the old and the new

is a bit blurry here, and the listed monuments and completely new buildings are intertwined.

Maybe, for me - an architecture historian it would be better if this line between 19th century and 21st century buildings was a bit clearer.

But on the other hand one can say, that old factories used to grow by addition of ever newer segments.

And this was one of key features of the quick development of industrial areas back in the Times of the industrial revolution.

This proces was simply reanacted here, in the beginning of the 21st century.

The thing that unifies the buildings and makes them all appear homogeneous is of course the material

that we find of course in the old industrial buildings

but also in new buildings - brick.

Brick here is used in the new building very classicly and very honestly.

Of course the walls are made of reinforced concrete, and the brick is only their outer shell

but then again - this is real, full-seze brick, not just a wall tile or faux-imprint.

This is designed using classic brick-based detailing.

Referencing the ways, in which brick was used centuries ago.

These are true brick details, highlighting the qualities of this material.

In some places the new bricks have Stary Browar's impressions, just like some older bricks were stamped by their producers.

Thanks to this being real and honest material, it will get old and look very good in ten or a hundred years.

What we can see, when we take a look on old brick industrial buildings.

And since we are here, in the Courtyard of Art,

there is one final contradiction that I can see.

One final contrast reconciled here.

On this side I'm surrounded by buildings aligned variously.

But on the opposite side, the view opens up on a park.

So this final contradiction is architecture versus nature.

Stary Browar consists also of a large park.

From it one can clearly see that Stary Browar has been broken up into

smaller pieces, different buildings of varying hights not to dominate over the green area.

The most important place urban-planning-wise

is the Courtyard of Art. Its urban layout is very nice.

This a very well and carefully designed place.

And has many features of a good public space.

It is generally regular in shape, but also features some irregularities, like curved lines and a building inclined at an angle.

So it's regular but not stiff.

All the functions of Stary Browar are linked there.

There are many cafes, restaurants, you cen get into both phased of the shopping mall,

o the hotel, and father away - to the offices.

So it really is multi-functional, plus there's a space for cultural events.

And one side is open to the green of the park

and invites it inside.

It is partially covered with a roof.

And it works and is attended by people just like a good public space should.

But of course this is not public space.

It is not governed by local community, but by the owner and manager.

There are strict rules, which are enforced

The space is controlled and there is no place for spontaneity

like on a street or a market square.

And if there's a lesson to be learned from Stary Browar it is a lesson precisely about this.

For us and for the mayors of ours cities.

It is possible to design a good public space, that will work and atract people

but we must try and create it.

Stary Browar shows that it is possible to create a good space between commerce, culture, architecture, nature

where people would want to go.

And maybe we need to press for every city and town in Poland

to have such good space like this one.

But it needs to be true public space.

It can be done, and it can work.

So, what the authors of Stary Browar brewed in this old brewery?

In my opinion it isn't beer, but a cocktail.

Eclectic, diverse, post-modern cocktail.

Ingredients were added by architects, set designers, artists, conservators

and it was all mixed as if in a shaker

by the creator of this enterprise - Grażyna Kulczyk.

I think it is thanks to this fact, that behind all of this is one personality, that this shopping center

has its clear individual character, unlike any other in Poland.

And it is very consistent.

This consistency is visible of course thanks to the use of brick thoughout,

because it is quite obvious that you use brick when dealing with old industrial architecture.

But this consistency is also visible here.

We're next to Ratajczaka street

Here's a large media facade, consisting of strips of metal of various width, running at various angles.

When we look at what we're standing on, we can notice

that the pavement is also designed similarly.

There are strips of stone of various widths, running at various angles.

As if the pavement and the facade were in a dialogue with each other.

In Stary Browar old industrial era buildings

were used as a pretext to create completely new spaces.

Commercial, business, cultural

But it was done neatly and with longlasting materials

That's why in my opinion this centre is now getting old, but rather developing a patina,

and writes another chapter to the history of this place.

Thank you for watching this video.

Click below to see a film about one of my favourite skyscrapers, the Rondo 1 in Warsaw

And clock here to subsribe to this channel. Thank you and see you soon.

For more infomation >> Co architekci nawarzyli w Starym Browarze? | Architecture is a good idea - Duration: 15:45.

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Clever Movie Crossovers You Totally Missed - Duration: 5:06.

Crossover movies like Freddy vs. Jason or Alien vs. Predator take characters from two

different franchises and pair them up, establishing the characters as co-inhabitants of the same

cinematic universe.

But some movie crossovers are so subtle you might have missed them entirely.

For example ...

Spy Kids & Machete

That's right, the gadget-creating uncle from Robert Rodriguez's Spy Kids series is the

same dude who later goes on a mission for vengeance and blood in the violent Machete

and Machete Kills movies, also helmed by Rodriguez.

In Spy Kids and its sequels, Danny Trejo's "Uncle Machete" and his collection of super-cool

spy gadgets comes to the aid of the Cortez children against a variety of enemies.

In 2007, Rodriguez teamed up with Quentin Tarantino for the horror double-feature Grindhouse,

which had fake trailers for nonexistent movies, including one for Machete.

"I cost the most, because I'm the best there is."

After making the trailer, Rodriguez decided to go ahead and give Uncle Machete his own

full-length film — a rare case of PG and R-rated films sharing the same universe.

Trading Places & Coming to America

In 1983's Trading Places, Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy are forced to switch lives through

the orchestrations of the nefarious broker brothers Randolph and Mortimer Duke.The movie

ends with the Duke brothers' business ruined, leaving them destitute.

Five years later, another Eddie Murphy movie would show us what became of the Dukes after

their downfall.

In 1988's Coming to America, Murphy is a different character: an incredibly wealthy prince who

travels to the United States in search of a bride who will love him for who he is rather

than for his money.

To further that goal, the prince gives all his remaining money to a pair of homeless

men—who turn out, somehow, to be the Duke brothers.

"Mortimer, we're back!"

yea!

Star Wars & E.T.

This sci-fi crossover was deliberately planned by both Steven Spielberg and George Lucas.

First, there's the scene from E.T. where the kids encounter a kid dressed in a Yoda costume,

reminding E.T. of where he came from ...

"Home!"

That's… obviously not the REAL ancient Jedi, but E.T. clearly recognizes the guy.

Spielberg's buddy Lucas returned the favor in 1999, when he included a delegation of

E.T. aliens as members of the Galactic Senate.

According to an Extended Universe novella, the aliens are known as Asogians and their

leader in the Senate was named Grebleips–"Spielberg" spelled backward.

The Rules of Attraction & American Psycho

If you're familiar with the source material for these two very different movies, then

you probably already know about the connection between The Rules of Attraction and American

Psycho, both based on Bret Easton Ellis novels.

If you're not, then here's a brief explanation: James van der Beek's Sean Bateman in 2002's

The Rules of Attraction is actually the younger brother of Christian Bale's Patrick Bateman

from 2000's American Psycho.

Patrick was supposed to make a brief appearance in The Rules of Attraction, played by another

actor, but all of his scenes were cut before the movie was released.

The Lone Ranger & The Green Hornet

While it can't be acknowledged openly today onscreen by either of the characters, the

Lone Ranger and The Green Hornet are actually related.

In the early radio serials, it was established that Britt Reid, The Green Hornet, was the

descendant of John Reid, The Lone Ranger.

Depending on the source, John is described as either Britt's uncle or great uncle.

Much later, the properties were sold to different studios, so the characters can't intermingle

on the big screen.

But while movie crossovers are out, the comic book rights are a slightly different story.

In 2016, Dynamite Comics obtained the rights to both characters and published a crossover

comic book series that explores their familial connection.

Tarantino's dual cinematic universes

For years, movie fans have speculated that all of Quentin Tarantino's movies take place

within the same universe, and Tarantino himself confirmed in 2016 that the theory is mostly

correct.

There are actually two universes within his films — one is the "real" world in which

many of the characters live, and the other is the "movie" world containing films that

the people in the "real" world would go and see.

As Tarantino explains, "So when all the characters of Reservoir Dogs or Pulp Fiction, when they

go to the movies, Kill Bill is what they go to see.

From Dusk Till Dawn is what they see."

The logic isn't airtight, but here's just one example: In Pulp Fiction, actress Mia

Wallace, played by Uma Thurman, says she was in a TV pilot about female secret agents where

she plays "the deadliest woman in the world with a knife" — a reference to Thurman's

character, The Bride, in Kill Bill.

This means the drug-addled Mia Wallace cleaned up her act to play "The Bride" within the

Tarantino universe, making Kill Bill more than just a spiritual sequel to Pulp Fiction.

Thanks for watching!

Click the Looper icon to subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Plus check out all this cool stuff we know you'll love, too!

For more infomation >> Clever Movie Crossovers You Totally Missed - Duration: 5:06.

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5 Reasons why he writes but does not invite you out - Duration: 2:34.

For more infomation >> 5 Reasons why he writes but does not invite you out - Duration: 2:34.

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Holly's Drawing Prompt - Foreground, middle, & background - Duration: 5:02.

so sometime recently Holly Brown, she wrote her own sketch prompts and then put

them in a sketch book and it's kind of a great idea! especially if you are at a

loss for what to do or if you don't really feel like you're at the top of

your game but you still want to keep practicing. you can refer to these

prompts to continue your work. we used to call these drawing challenges and they

were super popular. it always looks like something that would be fun but then you

go through the list and you realize that this isn't fun at all, you know? most the

time they're just so vague... it's easy to go through dictionary and make a list of

words and it's quite another to actually suggest something specific to work on.

especially if it's outside of your comfort level, it could really help you.

there's actually probably a lot out there now that are actually interesting

and I should actually look into them but for now...

I've downloaded Holly's list because she made it available to everyone so if you

want to try it for yourself I will leave a link. she is doing a book giveaway and

I'm not going to hold out for that, because, you know, I already have sketchbooks.

it's just the denek sketchbook from Michaels

it's just cardstock. it doesn't handle watercolor very well. I thought that it

was kind of a nice in-between because the one before this was just a cheap

sketchbook with drawing paper in it. the other ones that I usually make for

myself are full of mixed media paper that's much better with watercolor and

so I just kind of wanted a happy medium. I wanted something that could handle

watercolor but that I didn't feel bad about using it up! this particular page is the

first one that I'm doing. I'm just going from top to bottom I guess. I don't

intend for these sketches to be finished work. I don't really want them to be. I

want to stay loose. I want it to be a bit of a really low level exercise that I can

just rattle off but I also don't want to just waste my sketchbook doing this. so I

kind of hope to get a little bit of a middle ground. maybe some stuff will be

good, some stuff will be terrible, I don't know. I'm going to do these in the

sketchbook... I'm starting from the back of the book and then working my way

in, so because I want to have all these challenges sort of group together. so I'm

starting from the back . this is the last page in my journal. as I work it

will meet up with the rest of my sketchbook in the end and then that way,

regular work and little sketch challenges won't be interspersed. and

this is me trying to fight the temptation of making a separate

sketchbook for every sketch challenge I do because who needs another excuse to

have a sketchbook, alright? so I'm going to do this that way. another thing I

realized at the end of this is that maybe I shouldn't use watercolor?

this is the perfect thing to do with acrylic or gouache ... things I don't

normally use. because this is a challenge , these are sketches that I wouldn't normally

be doing which seems like perfect opportunity to just step away from my

regular work completely. and I am super interested in gouache at this very

moment. I think this this would be a great way to use up the current really

low quality gouache that I have and maybe even my acrylic paint. because right now

I'm kind of tempted to get acryla gouache and I sort of have it bookmarked on

Amazon. but I'm not buying it right now. mostly because A: I'm not selling

anything right now so I don't have any art related income

to spend on art supplies right now and B: I don't really want to buy art supplies

while I already have them. I want to kinda use them up so I think I might do that. I make

might use up my crappy gouache and my acrylic paint to do these and I think maybe that

would be fun, I don't know. I'm going to try it one time after this one and see how

it goes and decide from there because I do

still think watercolor is the easiest medium to make anything look good! this

is this is an artist hack, guys - if you want something to look good with very little

effort go for watercolor because it just it looks really interesting

no matter what you do with it. it will be a completely different

way of painting as well so it's like two different challenges: paint things that I

would not normally think and paint in a certain way that would not normally

paint and see where that goes. it will probably go nowhere but it will make me

feel like I'm doing something . look forward to that and I will see

you in the next one, bye

For more infomation >> Holly's Drawing Prompt - Foreground, middle, & background - Duration: 5:02.

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Easy skirt DIY from Maxi Skirt //Remakes - Duration: 1:57.

Easy skirt DIY form Maxi Skirt

Measure the length you want your skirt to be

Then mark from the bottom

This is in order to keep the flounce part

Then cut

Take an elastic and measure it round your waist, make it a bit tight

Join the sides of the elastic

Pin the elastic on at least four points on the skirt's waist, then pull it as you stitch

All done!

For more infomation >> Easy skirt DIY from Maxi Skirt //Remakes - Duration: 1:57.

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Amor Ágape de Deus na dimensão Perdão - Paschoal Piragine - Duration: 43:34.

For more infomation >> Amor Ágape de Deus na dimensão Perdão - Paschoal Piragine - Duration: 43:34.

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Pokémon R/S/E - City & Town themes (8-BIT) - Duration: 24:19.

Hoenn City and Town Themes

8-bit covers by We Are Magikarp

Pokémon Ruby/Sapphire/Emerald

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