|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
An understanding of trends is a fundamental skill for anyone
working in the fashion industry. In this book Gwyneth Holland and
Rae Jones look at how to produce a well-researched trend, from
initial inspiration to concrete idea and, eventually, real product.
Illustrated throughout with insights from practising trend
forecasters and industry insiders, it is an invaluable guide for
fashion students and practitioners alike.
Unbeknownst to him, Benny, a four year old is the object of
contention between two strong-willed females in his family. One is
Sylvia, the woman he has lived with his entire life and he knows as
mother. The other is Isabella, the oldest child in the family and
Benny's birth mother who he affectionately calls Issie. After
Sylvia accidently sweetens tea with LSD laced sugar cubes while at
Issie's apartment, she and her husband decide Benny is not safe in
her care. Determined that she will not be separated from Benny,
Issie, with the help of three odd ball friends, Dennis the dwarf,
and Slim and Jim the midget Siamese twins, spirit Benny away while
the family is at church. Dennis and the twins have a problem that
Issie wasn't aware of - they owe a crime boss for a large supply of
marijuana they took. The crime boss sends two of his men to find
them to collect. When it's discovered they don't have the money nor
the supply the crime boss decides to place all of them in a rigged
wrestling tour, taking on a volunteer from the audience who happens
to be working for the crime boss. Benny has to pretend he is a
midget because Issie doesn't want them knowing he is a child. Along
the way deep friendships develop. Benny wants to find a way to free
himself and Issie from the crime bosses clutches and thinks he
knows how once he discovers by accident that a walking stick Dennis
carries with him is capable of belching fire and causing damage.
As a competitive swimmer as a child, Rae learned quickly that
holding her breath was the best way to win. It was also the best
way to drown. In this poignant memoir she whispers her story
breathlessly to your ears. From the fizz of champagne, to the waves
of the ocean, she swims these stories together through space and
time. Weaving in the water, each swell of her body holds a memory,
each chapter is a bubble released from the darkness of the deep,
and each breath is necessary.
Ms. Jones humorously talks about finances and budgets like she
talks about diets. Almost everyone needs to work on both, but
prefers to avoid the topic if at all possible. She specifically
targets the 20 and 30-something age group and how they can best get
a handle on their finances now and create wealth. This book is
chock full of easy to read information, worksheets and baby steps
for those who think budgets are too hard to follow. She emphasizes
a spending plan, eliminating debt and her secret way to get almost
$5k of free money and have close to $20k in your pocket in 10
years. This is a must-read book for anyone who's looking for a
little basic financial information and a whole lot of courage. The
book is condensed, the points are concise and the reading is FUN.
Highly recommend for anyone thinking (and/or stressing) about their
money.
22 papers from the conference aeGoing over Old Ground: Perspectives
on Archaeological, Geophysical and Geochemical Survey in
ScotlandAe, held at the Department of Archaeology, University of
Glasgow, Scotland, August 2003. Contents: (1) The Scottish
Archaeological Geophysics Database - some preliminary findings
(Christine Rennie); (2) Recent geophysical surveys at Roman forts
in Central Scotland (Richard Jones, Alan Leslie and Paul Johnson,
with Geoff Bailey); (3) Magnetic Stones - an investigation of the
recumbent stone circle at Rothiemay, Banffshire (Arnold Aspinall);
(4) Geophysical Investigation of Battle Moss Stone Rows (Louise
McAllan); (5) Geophysical Surveys at an Industrial Archaeological
site in Fife (Richard Bates and M Duff); (6) Geomagnetic surveys
over cropmarks in the environs of Traprain Law, East Lothian
(Duncan Hale, Colin Haselgrove and Leon Fitts); (7) Echoes of the
Past: Geophysical surveys in Scottish waters and beyond (Martin
Dean); (8) Geophysical survey on the M74 (Iain Banks); (9) Testing
the use of multi-spectral imagery for detecting buried archaeology
in sand dune-dominated systems (Tom Dawson and Sandy Winterbottom);
(10) Establishing patterns of coastal evolution - the role of
Ground-Penetrating Radar and Archaeology (Alistair F Rennie and
James D Hansom); (11) A pedological approach to reconstructing
land-use and settlement form in the Hebrides: Lessons for the
future (J. A. Entwistle, K. J. W. McCaffrey and R. A. Dodgshon);
(12) Evaluating the use of multi-element soil analysis as an aid to
archaeological interpretation (Clare Wilson, Donald Davidson and
Malcolm Cresser); (13) Classifying later prehistory in
Wigtownshire, South-West Scotland: a geophysical exploration (Tessa
Poller); (14) The Upper Clyde Valley: Success? (Lorna Sharpe); (15)
Sinking into Old Ground - Ground Probing Radar in the Scottish
Wetlands (Erica Utsi); (16) Geophysical Survey below peat? - A
simple magnetic susceptibility method (Adrian Challands); (17) The
requirements for archiving geophysical survey information in
Scotland (Peter McKeague); (18) Geophysical Survey from the Unit
Management Perspective: a view from Scotland (Alan Leslie and Iain
Banks); (19) Birsay and Skaill, Orkney: landscape survey 2003
(David Griffiths); (20) Inside the mound: geophysical
investigations of the Scatness Iron-age Broch, Shetland (Armin
Schmidt, Tim Sutherland and Steve Dockrill); (21) Geophysical
Survey at the Orkney World Heritage Site (John Gater, Dan Sheil,
Nick Card and Susan Ovenden); (22) Geophysics and the management of
a designed historical landscape: a case study at Dunkeld (Dan
Kellogg and Richard Jones).
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Dune: Part 2
Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya, …
DVD
R221
Discovery Miles 2 210
|