Showing posts with label freebies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freebies. Show all posts

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Finished trilobite sampler and free pattern #3

I squeezed in another finish!  My first little three-trilobite sampler.  I need to find a gray slate or stone frame for this.


I am enjoying building my little trilobite library but it's slow going, what with the ADD-like nature of my stitching whims and inspirations.  The first two in this series are Phacops and Anomocaroidea.

This little third one is Asaphida Ogygiocaris.  Cute, huh?



I've stitched this little sampler using HDF silk in colors "Primitive Barn Brown" and "Primitive Barn Bunny" on which are very complementary to the light gray and brown mottling of the 36 ct. Silkweaver linen color "Rock Quarry".  As you can see I took inspiration from real gray and brown trilobite fossils from my own collection. 

In the interest of science education and encouraging our small community of scienc-y stitchers, I have been posting the patterns for these little dudes.  If you would like to share these freebies with others, please do so, but please forward them here and do not copy or sell the patterns. 

To save, right click on the photo above and when it loads, right click again "Save picture as" and save as you like.  Enjoy!

Monday, October 4, 2010

Another free trilobite!

My little landscape quilt is thisclose to being finished, and I am also thisclose to completing the first page of my Metta sampler, but oh there is just so much life to live outside of stitching and I'm not quite ready to post them yet.  I also recieved a couple new books and stash over the weekend but haven't yet taken pictures of them.  BUT I do not come here empty-handed.  The kids are busy "making dinosaur bones"  (again, no pictures yet) so in honor of that here's another trilobite pattern for your enjoyment! 

This here little dude is a Housia species of Anomocaroidea, which is a superfamily of suborder Asaphid trilobites.   They are found near Radium, British Columbia (where I have never been, but hope to go someday) and were usually about 3 centimeters long.  Cutie pies!  As always, please respect copyright laws and do not sell this pattern but please feel free to point other fossil-loving crafters in this direction.  Right click and "save as" to download.



Alright, I gotta go play MarioKart with the rugrats, put them to bed, finish *something* and then get a good night's sleep, so I can get up early tomorrow and drive an hour to sit in a hotel conference room and not fall asleep in a seminar on new standards for vapor intrusion assessment.  Onward!

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Free trilobite pattern -- Phacops

I went looking for small cross-stitch patterns of trilobites, especially ones that are accurate to actual species, because I'm thinking I want a sampler of trilobites.  The variation in these little fossilized critters is so endless, it will be interesting to see how they'd work set out like the old quaker or vierlande traditional samplers, with lots of motifs that are very similar in general outline, but very very different in the details.  My google-fu is strong, so I found...

None.  Go figure, I guess the community of nerdy, cross-stitching geologists is a small one indeed.

But, not to be deterred, I decided to make my own trilobite patterns.



For those who might not have been paying attention in school that day, trilobites, early arthropods, ruled the seas millions of years ago and went extinct before the dinosaurs even existed.  They were the single most diverse group of organisms that have lived on this earth and ranged in size from a couple feet to only a few millimeters across.   In the interest of science education and encouraging our small community of scienc-y stitchers, I'll post the patterns up here as well.  If you would like to share these freebies with others, please do so, but please forward them here and do not copy or sell the patterns. 

With all that out of the way, here is numero uno, the famous Phacops!


Right click and select "save target as" to download. 

The Phacops genus of trilobites was common about 400 million years ago and is well-known because of their large compound eyes and rounded shape.  Fun fact:  phacops is latin for "lens-face".  Ha!