Crochet Iconic Women


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Crochet patterns depicting world-changing women from Marie Curie to Malala, using the Japanese art of amigurumi. Whether it's Greta, RBG, or Billie Holiday, this collection of crochet patterns celebrates fifteen women who have made an impact on the global stage in fields like politics, sports, and science. Learn more about each of the characters featured in this collection and make unique gifts to inspire and delight all generations. Marie Curie • Cleopatra • Queen Elizabeth II • Malala Yousafzai • Rosa Parks • Billie Holiday • Ruth Bader Ginsburg • Serena Williams • Greta Thunberg • Jane Goodall • Amelia Earhart • Jane Austen • Florence Nightingale • Audrey Hepburn • Emmeline Pankhurst




The Crochet Woman


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24 Crochet Hats


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This book is a fabulous resource for making crochet hats in a variety of techniques and construction styles with inclusive sizing for men, women, children and babies. Charts, written instructions and lots of great crochet resources.




The Crochet Lady


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Mr. Q EL Maestro Albert Quintana unveils a hidden history of San Luis Valley with his depiction of his latest work, The Crochet Lady. Growing up in a lumber camp was beyond the Crochet Ladys wishes. She called her life boring. She could only hope and pray that her knight in shining armor would come to the rescue. She only had one promise, and that was to wait for that special person in her life. She told the story in the last years of her life. In her last days, she had gone deaf. She asked me to write her story. So through the use of a whiteboard, a dry-erase pen, and many hours of interview, I wrote her story. Because of this promise, I present the story of the Crochet Lady, my inspiration.




The Woman's World


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Woman's Home Companion


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Woman's World


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The Lunatic


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In part one of The Lunatic we find that the protagonist, Nicholas Antonus, has been mistakenly sentenced by a court of law to the Guilford mental institution. The staff runs the asylum in a most decidedly, diabolical manner. Nicholas chronicles all the horrific treatment in a secret journal so that someday others will know of this place. As the months go by and more patients "disappear," Nicholas fears that he will soon be the next victim. He has no immediate family and the mail has long since been discontinued, access to any telephone is prohibited. There is not one professional in the entire building that he can trust and who could notify the proper authorities about the daily crimes committed by the doctors and nurses. Finally, on a drug-clear day, Nicholas realizes that the review board has no intention of releasing him back into society and that he must risk escape or he too will leave Guilford by its chimney flue. In the second part of the book Nicholas is on the lam, returning to the Greek isle of Loxos to seek refuge and to reunite with relatives. He is readily welcomed back into the Ninios household and luxuriates in his new freedom. Nikos' days are spent at harbor cafes, sketching the townspeople, or wandering the streets and hillside villages drawing scenes of daily life. At night Nikos goes to the tavernas to watch the men dance and drink with the wild and funny Micales the butcher and Hassan the lonely, bootblack dwarf. Soon the signs of Nikos' periodic illness resurface. At first he dismisses the symptoms because the interval between the first and second occurrence has been so great, leading him to believe that he is perfectly all right. But frighteningly, he has two other separate episodes in quick succession and it is these attacks that make it quite clear to him that something is terribly wrong. He then worries for his family's safety and plans to leave the island at once.




The Woman's Magazine


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