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Create a cosy, colourful nursery for babies and toddlers with these
35 brilliant patterns. Knitting provides a great way of injecting
style and colour into interiors while also adding warmth and
comfort, making it the perfect method of decorating a nursery. Here
Melanie Porter presents a collection of hand-knitted nursery room
projects, as well as baby clothes and toys. The book is divided
into two sections: For Baby’s Room, which is inspired by vintage
colour palettes, and Toddler’s Room, which includes contemporary
and vibrant designs. Discover patterns to cover baskets, hooks and
coat hangers, as well as blankets for both mother and baby, rugs
and cushions. Make gorgeous decorations, from a mobile and hanging
pompoms to letter wall art and embroidery hoop pinboards. Classic
baby knits are included, too – booties, hats and mittens – and
toys, such as knitted blocks and even a rocking sheep! The
comprehensive techniques section covers the basics for beginners
and acts as a helpful reference guide for experienced knitters.
The neighbourhood children have to cross a very busy road to get to
school. Mrs Patel thinks it is dangerous, so she calls the traffic
police. But the drivers slow down when they see the policeman, so
he won't help. She complains to Aja, who tells her not to worry. He
borrows some equipment and sets up his own pretend speed trap. His
plan works and the cars all slow down.
This is a Neighbours story. There is going to be a street party on
First Avenue. Tiny is very keen to dance with Dudu, but she is not
interested. So Tiny enlists the help of others in First Avenue.
They help him dress and they organise music that will make Dudu
want to dance. Everyone joins in and Tiny gets his wish!
This is a Neighbours story. Mrs Allie, Gogo Vilakazi and Susan Smit
are looking for Sam, the twins and Nuha. Layla, Lindi and Neesha
offer to help find the other children. They realise that Raj knows
where they are, but that he has promised to keep it a secret and
not tell anyone else. He does point the girls in the correct
direction though and they find the children in an abandoned car on
the empty plot. Nuha is reading them stories!
This is a Neighbours story. The readers are introduced to the games
that the children who live in First Avenue play or don't play.
This is a Neighbours story. The Vilakazi family has chickens in
their yard. One chicken escapes through a hole in the fence and
runs around the neighbourhood. The number of items increases as the
story progresses, so you have one chicken, two children, three dogs
and so on.
This is a Neighbours story. The book introduces one of the main
characters in this series as well as her family and her home.
This is a Neighbours story. Layla and Neesha share a room, but
Neesha is very untidy and she leaves her things all over the place.
So Layla decides to draw a line down the middle of the room. She
makes Neesha take all her things to her own side of the room.
This is a Neighbours story. The children in the neighbourhood are
very hot. They decide to go down to the river at the end of their
road to have a swim. When they get there, the water is very dirty,
so they decide to clean it. As they clean, they get hot and dirty,
but they still cannot swim because the water is still too dirty.
Then they hear some splashing from Lindi's house. The dirty
children look over the wall and ask if they can join her.
This is a Neighbours story. The story takes us to the houses of
most of the neighbours who live in First Avenue. The learners have
to say who lives in each house. Each house is different, with the
concept of opposites introduced through the adjectives used to
describe each house.
This is a Neighbours story. The readers are introduced to the games
that the children who live in First Avenue play or don't play.
This is a Neighbours story, which introduces characters who live in
the street and who all look very different.
This is a Neighbours story. Neesha wants to play cricket. She tries
to get the others to play before school, but they won't play. She
tries again at school, but they all have things to do. She tries
again after school, but the others rush off. She is very sad until
she gets home and Aja offers to play cricket with her.
This is a Neighbours story. Lindi and her family are getting a new
swimming pool. The pool is delivered on a truck. All the
neighbourhood children are excited about the pool, so they come to
see it. But, the pool is too big to fit through the gates. Lindi's
dad makes the pool company use a crane to lift it over the wall.
Once in the yard, the pool is too big for the hole. Lindi's mom
tells the workers to dig some more. Everyone helps to dig the hole.
In the end, the pool does fit into the hole and all the people from
the neighbourhood squash into the pool.
This is a Neighbours story. The children who live in the street
decide to make a swing. They ask some of the adults to help them.
Kevin supplies a tyre, Mr Patel provides rope and Joe Mokwena helps
them hang the swing from a branch on the tree in the open plot
where they usually play.
Mrs Vilakazi buys a new TV. Mr Mokwena helps her take it to her
house in his taxi. Raj helps her set up the TV. At the same time,
Mr Patel buys a generator. The twins decide to invite many people
from the neighbourhood to watch the soccer match on their new TV
the next day. They also invite the people who helped them with the
TV; Mr Mokwena and Raj. While everyone is watching the soccer
match, the electricity goes off. Mr Patel invites everyone to watch
the rest of the match at his shop, where he connects the TV to his
generator.
Lindi and Spike see a snake slither into the Vilakazis' garden.
Lindi tells the twins that the snake is in their garden. They look
for it, can't fi nd it and assume it went into Sam's garden. They
tell Sam, but in their minds, the size of the snake has increased,
so they tell him that it is big. When they can't find the snake in
Sam's garden, they assume it is at the Mokwena's house. They tell
Mrs Mokwena that a very large snake may be in her garden. They
can't find it there and assume it's moved onto the Allies' house.
They tell Nuha that a huge snake may be in her garden. They meet
other people from the neighbourhood and each time they tell them
about the snake they refer to it as even larger than before. It
turns out to be a small, harmless mole snake.
Fill your home with 30 contemporary hand-knitted designs by Melanie
Porter. All of the projects in Knitted Home are easy to make and
will inject style and colour into your interiors. There are three
colour schemes to choose from – blues and greens in 'Cool
Collection'; reds, oranges, and yellows in 'Hot Ideas'; and whites,
creams, and greys in 'Pale Palette' – so there is something for
all tastes. You can start with smaller projects, such as the
bolster pillow cover, flower vase cosy, or stripy clock cover, then
move on to something a little larger, such as the rope knit basket,
chunky knit rug, or covered footstool. With a comprehensive
techniques section, you’ll discover how to use giant knitting
needles and how to measure furniture for a knitted cover, as well
as all the basics of knitting, so even beginners can try their hand
at these fabulous ideas.
This is a Neighbours story. It introduces the setting for events
that take place in the neighbourhood. It also introduces the
learners to the names of familiar places.
Layla sees a poster advertising a music festival. She decides to
start a band and asks the other children to join her. The first
problem the children have is that they don't have any instruments.
Nuha stops reading for a change to help them. She finds a whole lot
of scrap and hands it out. The children are confused until she
shows them how to make music with the scrap. Then the children have
to deal with the fact that they are making a noise and no one will
let them practise at their house. In the end, Kevin allows them to
practise at his workshop, because it is noisy anyway. They don't
win the competition, but they have great fun making a huge noise.
A digger digs trenches for new pipes in First Avenue. When the
digging is over, the children explore the mounds of earth and
holes. They look for buried treasure. After finding several
worthless items like fish bones and an old wrench, they find an old
broken plate with a gold edge. They are convinced that it is
valuable, so they each decide to take a piece home. Lindi's dad is
horrified when he sees the treasure. He confesses that he buried
the plate in the field after he broke it, because he was too scared
to tell his wife. Lindi's mom arrives home, but they quickly hide
the evidence from her.
Developmental disorders are often studied as either independent
research groups or as clinical case presentations; these approaches
are rarely combined. This book directly compares cognitive and
social functioning in three developmental disorders: Williams
syndrome (WS), Down syndrome (DS) and autism (AS), from both a
research and a clinical perspective. This unique approach provides
new insights into cognitive functioning within WS, DS and AS,
including: attention; memory; learning and processing styles;
verbal abilities; spatial skills and reasoning. New insights are
also provided into how WS, DS and AS view the world from a social
perspective, including: their ability to read emotions; their
motivational drive toward social interaction; and their Theory of
Mind, or their ability to understand other peoples behaviours based
on underlying desires, emotions, and thoughts. Findings also
highlight within-syndrome variability in cognitive and social
functions in WS, which was previously thought to have a homogenous
cognitive profile. The book is a valuable resource for researchers,
as well as health and education professionals.
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