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DIY Halloween canvas painting tutorial

e-artnow presents the new halloween collection with meticulously picked titles for the lovers of classic thriler horror, mystery and the feel of goose bumbs while reading. Contents: F. Marion Crawford: The Dead Smile The Screaming Skull. Arthur Machen: The Great God Pan The Three Impostors The Hill of Dreams. John Kendrick Bangs: Ghosts That Have Haunted Me Devil in Iron People of the Dark Marie Belloc Lowndes: From Out the Vast Deep Eleanor M. Ingram: The Thing from the Lake The Sorrows of Satan The Headless Horseman The House of the Vampire The Lancashire Witches John R. Musick: The Witch of Salem Fred M. White: Powers of Darkness The Doom of London Edgar Allan Poe: The Fall of the House of Usher The Masque of the Red Death The Murders in the Rue Morgue The Purloined Letter Henry James: The Turn of the Screw The Ghostly Rental Algernon Blackwood: The Willows The Wendigo The Damned H. P. Lovecraft: The Dunwich Horror The Shunned House M. R. James: Ghost Stories of an Antiquary A Thin Ghost and Others Wilkie Collins: The Haunted Hotel The Dead Secret The Devil’s Spectacles E. F. Benson: The Room in the Tower The Man Who Went Too Far The Terror by Night Nathaniel Hawthorne: Rappaccini’s Daughter Ambrose Bierce: Can Such Things Be? Soldier-Folk Some Haunted Houses William Hope Hodgson: The House on the Borderland The Boats of the Glen Carrig The Ghost Pirates The Night Land Carnacki Arthur Conan Doyle: The Hound of the Baskervilles Mary Shelley: Frankenstein The Mortal Immortal John William Polidori: The Vampyre Bram Stoker: Dracula The Jewel of Seven Stars The Lair of the White Worm Théophile Gautier: Clarimonde The Mummy’s Foot Richard Marsh: The Beetle Tom Ossington’s Ghost Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu: Carmilla Uncle Silas The Wyvern Mystery George W. M. Reynolds: Wagner, the Wehr-Wolf Guy de Maupassant: The Horla From the Tomb Washington Irving: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Rip Van Winkle Louisa M. Alcott: The Abbot’s Ghost Lost in the Pyramid Edith Nesbit: From the Dead The Mass for the Dead…



DIY Dollar Store Halloween Canvas Art

Look, it used to surprise and shock me when my babes would make awesome crafts and decor from random crap.

It even used to get my dander up – back in the days before I learned to trust her judgement. To hear the things she asked me to do! Yeesh, you’d have to be a card-carrying member of the Howling Quack Society to think of doing some of the things she’s cooked up in her overheated squirrel brain!

But after seeing her success, time and time again…yeah, it no longer has the impact it once had. It’s almost…expected, I guess.

I don’t know, maybe I should get her a fat load of garbage and see if she can turn it into a farmhouse platter or a boho ottoman or something.

Oh, and I don’t mean “garbage” like “let’s go junking and see what cool overlooked treasures we find!” No.

I mean, I’m gonna find the nearest landfill, and go schlepping through hills of rotting banana peels and fish heads so I can fill a contractor bag with stinky, oozing actual garbage, because I think my babes needs a real challenge for a change!

Because I should be amazed at what she thought to do with one of the humblest items at Dollar Tree. An item that no one thinks twice about. An item that’s literal sole purpose in life (besides looking good) is to catch crumbs and spilled drinks!

Who thinks of turning a disposable table cover into wall art fer cryin’ out loud!

Oh, sure, if it was a fancy hand-woven tablecloth made by Yaghan artisans from berry-dyed guanaco fur in the southernmost reaches of Tierra del Fuego then, yeah, mount that sucker on the wall.

But this is a whisper-thin disposable table cover we’re talking about here! It wasn’t made by human hands – it was belched from a great machine somewhere deep in the heart of Guandong Province in China! You don’t make art from it!

You drop orange-frosted cupcakes on it.

You spill Juicy Juice on it.

And then you crumple it up and toss it in the trash!

The nerve of that woman I call “my babes!” What won’t she make me craft with.

Hey, wait a minute…

Do you see what she did?

She got me all fired up again about her crafting material choices!

Okay, so maybe I don’t need to fill up a sack of stinking chicken bones and old parmesan rinds, because my old lady can still surprise me! [Old lady, hmmm? Tell me again, which one of us is in his fiftieth year? -Handan]

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Victoria Carrington is Professor of Education in the School of Education and Lifelong Learning at the University of East Anglia. She researches and writes extensively in the areas of new technologies, youth and literacies with a particular interest in the impact of new digital media on literacy practices both in and out of school. Her work has drawn attention to issues of text production, identity and literacy practices within the affordances of digital technologies and new media. Jennifer Rowsell is Professor and Canada Research Chair at Brock University. She has co-written and written several books in the areas of New Literacy Studies, multimodality, and multiliteracies. Her current research interests include children’s digital and immersive worlds; adopting and applying multimodal epistemologies with adolescents and teenagers; and ecological work in communication Esther Priyadharshini is Senior Lecturer in education at the School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia, UK. She has a keen interest in the area of cultural studies in education, particularly around the broad themes of food, sex and death. Her research uses post-colonial, post-structural and feminist theories to understand educational encounters/sites. She is the associate editor of the Cambridge Journal of Education. Rebecca Westrup is a Lecturer in Education at the University of East Anglia. Her research interests are primary concerned with young people, education and identity and how aspects of psychology and sociology intersect with educational experiences. In particular she is interested in students’ experiences of assessment in compulsory and post-compulsory education and the (re)shaping of their learner identities.

Название Generation Z: Zombies, Popular Culture and Educating Youth
Cultural Studies and Transdisciplinarity in Education
Редакторы Victoria Carrington , Jennifer Rowsell , Esther Priyadharshini , Rebecca Westrup
Издание: иллюстрированное
Издатель Springer, 2015
ISBN 981287934X, 9789812879349
Количество страниц Всего страниц: 187
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Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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