Debra Bianculli
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  • Debra Bianculli
  • Classes
  • Agricultural + Botanical Paintings
  • objects
  • about
  • design + pattern
  • inquiries
Debra Bianculli
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Instagram @DebraStudio

January 22nd, 2014

1/22/2014

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1.16.14

1/22/2014

2 Comments

 
Needle phobia is a real recognized condition, and I have it!
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1.15.14

1/15/2014

3 Comments

 
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When a rose gets droopy, just pop it's head off in your hand and admire a completely fresh side of the bloom, if only for a moment.
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1.10.14

1/11/2014

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This little hunny of a tchzachki is manufactured for pure ear cleaning and itching bliss!
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Jan 9

1/9/2014

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Flat footed folks are subject to plantar fasciitus.  ow.
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Jan. 7 & 8

1/8/2014

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January 7 - statistics show that frozen ivf embryo have higher rates of success.

January 8 - The Beck song "Debra" actually mentions Zankou Chicken in addition to Glendale. I always wanted it to be about Glendale,  CA, but now I know it is.
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2014 - What I learned...

1/6/2014

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This year, I have decided to make this blog a true web log - a way to keep track of something new I learn everyday. So far, I have been logging my lessons, findings and facts in my phone calendar, but I will begin posting these here, now. Today's entry will include the past week's. I hope I am able to add photos to make this much more exciting, but for now, it might just be a list:
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Jan 1 - A drive to Malibu is always a good idea.

Jan 2 - I will never again take modern plumbing for granted.
Jan 3 - I get sad when my mom leaves. Every time. Yeah, living so far from family is rough.
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Jan 4 - Spanish moss, found in the trees in the deep south like FL - is apparently covered in hard-biting chiggers. Never touch this.




Jan 5 - According to Dom, dogs should not eat walnuts.

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Jan 6 - I have always wondered about the word "purple". How come in so many languages, the color is known as some form of "violet", yet in American English we use the term "purple". Well, in reading the book Folk Art by Tina Kafka, I learned that the process of harvesting purple from a species of shellfish is done along the Pacific coast of Mexico:
"the Purpura Patula is picked off wet rocks at low tide; the dyer squeezes and blows on the mollusk which, in distress, secretes a liquid onto the yarn held against it. Within the next three minutes, the substance turns from transparent, to dull yellow, vivid green and finally purple. The shellfish is then returned to the sea, only to be "milked" again a month later. (Jacqueline Herald, World Crafts. Asheville: Lark Books, 1992. p.130)"

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    I'm Debra and this is a curated collection of my life's little projects and captured beauty. Sharing stuff I love with you.

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