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Posted (edited)

I have just uploaded all my photos of this weekend to my webalbum. You can see it at:

Johan's WebAlbum Photos

If you recognize a maker and I do not have his or her name with the article, please let me know who it was that made a certain article....

Here is a teaser:

IMG_2319.JPG

Edited by Johanna
clarified title

JOhan

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****Afrikaans: Leerwerker *****  ****Zulu: lesikhumba isisebenzi  Latvian: ādas darba ņēmējs *****Russian: кожа работника ****English: Leatherworker ****Dutch: Lederbewerker ****Flemish: Leerbewerker ****Hebrew: עור פועל ****German: Leder Handwerker ****Hungarian: Bőrdíszműves ****Turkish: deri işçisi ****French: Artisan du Cuir ****Spanish: Artesano de Cuero ****Norwegian: Skinn kunstners ****Swedish: Läderhantverkare ****Greek: δερμάτινα εργαζόμενος  Sotho: mosebeletsi oa letlalo

 

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Posted

It was so good to meet you at last, and thank you for sharing your pics. I enjoyed our conversations, and I'm happy for you and your family that you have decided to stay in the US permanently and are becoming citizens. (Everybody cheer here!) That's what makes America great. I'll never call you "John" though! ;)

Johanna

 

 

You cannot depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus. - Mark Twain

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Posted

Here's some updates for you. Picture #12 (the building) is John VanZant. I don't think he did picture #13, but I could be wrong.

Pictures #21, #22 (the card game), #97 (3D dragon), #100, #101 (tooled dragon), #107, #108, #109 (hillbilly shack) all belong to Roz "The Dragon Lady" Kaohn.

Pictures #91, #92 (bird necklace), #125 and #126 (skull notebook) belong to Bonnie Dunnewind (think that's how you spell her last name)

Pictures #86, #87 and #88 (vase and purse) are Michiko Matsuda's work.

Picture #115 was Anne C. Ross (she didn't know if her work was good enough to be in anything but open... Silly girl)

Pictures #137 and #138 (harlequin mug) was Ben Bass (my wife couldn't stand for me not to have something in competition, so this is what we picked).

I can probably get you some more names, but this is what I can come up with right now.

Thank you for posting all of those wonderful pictures!

Ben Bass

Legendary Leatherworks - Owner, leathersmith, grunt, scapegoat.

www.legendaryleatherworks.com

Find us on Facebook: Legendary Leatherworks

Gateway Leather Guild - charter member. past president.

www.gatewayleatherguild.org

  • Members
Posted

Thanks Ben - I have them updated with those names ...

Here's some updates for you. Picture #12 (the building) is John VanZant. I don't think he did picture #13, but I could be wrong.

Pictures #21, #22 (the card game), #97 (3D dragon), #100, #101 (tooled dragon), #107, #108, #109 (hillbilly shack) all belong to Roz "The Dragon Lady" Kaohn.

Pictures #91, #92 (bird necklace), #125 and #126 (skull notebook) belong to Bonnie Dunnewind (think that's how you spell her last name)

Pictures #86, #87 and #88 (vase and purse) are Michiko Matsuda's work.

Picture #115 was Anne C. Ross (she didn't know if her work was good enough to be in anything but open... Silly girl)

Pictures #137 and #138 (harlequin mug) was Ben Bass (my wife couldn't stand for me not to have something in competition, so this is what we picked).

I can probably get you some more names, but this is what I can come up with right now.

Thank you for posting all of those wonderful pictures!

JOhan

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****Afrikaans: Leerwerker *****  ****Zulu: lesikhumba isisebenzi  Latvian: ādas darba ņēmējs *****Russian: кожа работника ****English: Leatherworker ****Dutch: Lederbewerker ****Flemish: Leerbewerker ****Hebrew: עור פועל ****German: Leder Handwerker ****Hungarian: Bőrdíszműves ****Turkish: deri işçisi ****French: Artisan du Cuir ****Spanish: Artesano de Cuero ****Norwegian: Skinn kunstners ****Swedish: Läderhantverkare ****Greek: δερμάτινα εργαζόμενος  Sotho: mosebeletsi oa letlalo

 

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Members
Posted

Thank you for the pictures. It gives me a good idea of what it must have been like. I cannot compare my own work with those in the pictures - yet ......but sometime .....someday .....when I'm older .....

Citizenship? Eish, Africa bleeds for the loss of her children as the umbilical cords are cut.

Schalk

His tongue was framed to music,

And his hand was armed with skill;

His face was the mould of beauty,

And his heart the throne of will.

R.W. Emerson

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