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Striped DrumVelvet StripedPink VelvetJones CreativeJo JonesHandmade LampshadesBespoke HandmadeDrum LampshadeRed And PinkForwardRed and Pink Velvet Striped Drum Lampshade by JoJonesCreative on EtsyAll ROMO catalogues and technical brochures We use cookies on this website to make sure that we can provide you with the best experience of shopping with us. You can for these cookies at any time. If you continue to use our site without changing your settings, then we'll assume that you're happy to accept all cookies on this website. Providing beautiful & inspiring fabrics for commercial interiors around the worldDesigners Guild Udyana Wallpaper Select product options to see stock & delivery information. Beautiful abstract floral motif wallpaper from Designers Guild. The stunning Udyana Wallpaper is made from a heavyweight, non-woven paper which is easy to hang on the walls. It is adorned with a refined and understated monotone pattern with a free-flowing distressed floral motif design.
The paper blends various original printing techniques to give it an artisan, hand-finished and textured touch. The elegant Udyana Wallpaper offers better wall coverage space and channels free-thinking design. Vertical pattern repeat: 64cm Free UK Delivery over £50. Find out more about UK delivery. PLEASE NOTE THIS IS A MADE TO ORDER ITEM: Estimated dispatch date is shown above. Delivered by courier Monday – Friday, 8.30am - 6pm. Our team is available 7 days a week: Monday to Thursday 8.30am - 6pm, Friday 8.30am - 4pm and Saturday to Sunday 9.00am - 5.30pm. We currently ship to many countries, find out more about our International shipping options. RETURNS & RESTOCKING FEES: Please note this item is made to order and is subject to a 50% restocking fee. We recommend requesting samples of the finish before ordering to ensure the product is suitable for your needs. Refer to our returns page for full terms & conditions.
If you require further info contact our customer service team. Opening her first shop in 1970, Tricia Guild has become renowned internationally for her Designers Guild ‘lifestyle’ characterised by vibrant textile designs, intricate patterned wallcoverings and her joyful celebration of colour. trilogy lined grommet curtain panelChoose from the Houseology collection of oriental, ikat, large scale floral, ombre shading and kids collections too...hookless mystery fabric shower curtain w/ chrome ringsProducing original cushions, rugs, wall coverings and luxury bed linen, every piece from the Designers Guild collection will bring personality and vitality to the heart of your interior space.jag curtains blinds bayswater
Why shop with Houseology Houseology is not only the UK's premier online interior design store - it is an emporium of design ideas, advice & inspiration and a platform of tools & technology designed to make your interior design decisions and calculations easy. Bespoke curtains and blinds, made for your home or workplace, for you the discerning customer by Denise formerly of GBM Sewing Services (1997 - 2004) 208 Photos and videos Are you sure you want to view these Tweets? Viewing Tweets won't unblock @ScarboroCurtain. Loading seems to be taking a while. Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information. Add a location to your Tweets When you tweet with a location, Twitter stores that location. You can switch location on/off before each Tweet and always have the option to delete your location history. Turn location onNot nowAnyone can follow this listOnly you can access this list
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Follow more accounts to get instant updates about topics you care about. See the latest conversations about any topic instantly. Never miss a Moment Catch up instantly on the best stories happening as they unfold. WSJ (Friday) 10:27 (pannonica) Attention, crossworders in the Chicago, Philadelphia, and Baltimore metro areas! Marbles: The Brain Store will host amateur crossword tournaments the weekend of April 28-29 in several locations: Marbles is hoping to arrange tournaments in the other regions where they have stores, but those aren’t confirmed yet. We’ll post the links here when registration opens. If you’re a crossword pro interested in judging at these local tournaments, let me know. Published constructors, people who edit or proofread crosswords, ACPT hotshots–we’d love to have you as judges.A 62-worder with those two massively open corners divided by a fat diagonal swath of words. The low word count brings a handful of compromises, but there’s some fun stuff to offset the bad mouthfuls.
And there’s an uncharacteristic difficulty level, with the puzzle feeling more like a Saturday NYT than a Friday. Stark contrast with the prevailing vibe of late, which has been surprisingly pliable Friday NYTs. On the negative side, I wouldn’t have said that MEAT DIET was a “thing.” Latin plural [Tabulae __] RASAE is alarming to see. I rarely think of “sediment” as a verb (SEDIMENTED = [Deposited into a bank]). “I’LL NEVER” feels incomplete in a way that [“Not if my life depended on it!”] doesn’t. And the VALLI/VOILES crossing is probably miring a lot of solvers in cruciverbal quicksand. Those [Curtain fabrics] are VOILES, not TOILES. And I listened to pop radio in 1975, but have no recollection of the song in the Frankie VALLI clue, [“Swearin’ to God” singer, 1975]. And yes, I had TALLI first. (Nice echo of the clue for TORI AMOS, though–[Singer with the 1994 #1 alternative rock hit “God”]. That song hit #72 overall in the US but topped the “modern rock” charts.
Apparently the Valli song hit #6. Obscure name of the day: ODO [__ of Lagery (Pope Urban II’s real name)]. Who knew there was another Odo besides the Star Trek spin-off shape-shifter? You know those puzzles that flip the usual phrasing between clues and answers, with a single short word serving as the clue for a group of answers that read like crossword clues? This puzzle’s theme does that, but it has the sense to use [Flip] as the theme clue. The various definitions for that word include BECOME EXCITED, COMEDIAN WILSON, DIVING MANEUVER, and RESELL QUICKLY (as in real estate). Now, these sorts of themes seldom move me, but I like the flippiness of the [Flip] twist and I like to be reminded of Flip Wilson, whose TV show my family loved when I was a kid. There are few different activities going on in this astrophysically-themed crossword. First and foremost is the central block; that little square packs quite a punch. The across and down fill preceding it both end in BLACK, while the two answers following it begin with HOLE.
Thus we have a BLACK HOLE reading in both directions. Additionally, there is a related two-part symmetrical component: Oh, and there are also circles, arranged in a circle, ringing the central ■. These letters—starting slightly unconventionally just before the “12 o’clock” spot, say 11:55—spell E-V-E-N-T–H-O-R-I-Z-O-N. Merriam-Webster’s definition of event horizon is “the surface of a black hole : the boundary of a black hole beyond which nothing can escape from within it,” and states that the first known use was in 1969.And also additionally, there’s another theme-associated clue, running down the east side of the central feature. 37d [What this puzzle’s central phenomenon may once have been] STAR. The may seems unnecessary, since as far as I’m aware, the science is fairly solid on the matter. The fill’s symmetric partner is 29d RIPE [Somewhat smelly], which is wholly unrelated. I like the theme, but my sense is that it lacks elegance because too many elements are piled on in a fit of overzealousness, with STAR the lopsided cherry on top.
Many of the clues, in varying amounts of tandentiality and tenuousness, seem to have a relation to the theme, although it’s probably a combination of having one’s mind primed and the vastness of the subject. Thus we have SPIN, ITALO Calvino as the author of Invisible Cities, NASA, the light-related RAINBOW. Stretching a little, cases can be made for the wonderment of OVERAWE and OOHED, the religion/cosmology divide (choosing a theologist named EDWARDS, rather than director BLAKE, politician JOHN, Egyptologist AMELIA, or another), the consuming destructive force of MORDOR, and so on. Elsewhere, admirable triple seven-stacks comprise each of the four corners, this symmetry is a by-product of  the central vertical theme content, LAMP and CARD. We have RAINBOW, INDIANA, STEPHEN; and HAWKING, EDWARDS, DEFTEST. The longest non-theme entries are the very welcome BIOSPHERE and MINNEHAHA (which means “rushing water,” not “laughing water,” as some have said—don’t be misled by the -haha).
A minimum of junk fill and a number of playful clues elevate the puzzle as well. Overall, a solid solving experience, but I do wish that either the constructor or editor had pulled things together more compactly and forcefully. The premise behind today’s crossword is that “squares” would see common expressions containing numbers as the square of those numbers: I knew right away that I was in for a little bit of “fun with math,” as the clue for 1-Across was [Number that’s its own square]. (The answer is ONE.) But it still took a lot of crossings before I finally figured out exactly how all the squaring was to be used here. Indeed, I had FOUR and NINE in place early on but couldn’t figure out how those entries ended until the SIXTEENTH OF JULY fell. There’s some really cool stuff in this puzzle, but I have come to expect highly entertaining puzzles from Patrick. Some notable goodies include: (1) OYSTER BED; (2) STANK, clued as [Offended the olfactory senses];
(3) fun names like RUPAUL, YODA, and, of course, SAMMY Davis, Jr., the guy with the [Rat Pack name]; and (5) that whole conglomeration of Professor SNAPE, NINJA, SHAFTS, HAN Solo of Star Wars, T-SHIRTS, and MONTAGUE. It all abuts UGH, but entertaining fill like that is the furthest thing from UGH! Good puzzle for “Sports Fan Friday,” with a three-piece theme and a bunch of sports-related fill throughout the puzzle. There are some names I didn’t know, but the crossing answers filled in the letters for me. The theme is about my second-favorite pinoy who weighs under 150 lbs: The names I didn’t know were 20a, STAN, [Chicago Blackhawks GM Bowman] and 25d: DOM, [Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Capers]. Yes, I live in Chicago and yes, my husband’s a Packers fan, but I still didn’t know these names. Player names are far more familiar. Other sporting content includes RORY McIlroy, a Maple LEAF, REY Mysterio (does WWE wrestling count as sports?), an ACE pitcher proud of her ARM, Barry Bonds being Bobby Bonds’ SON, Tony ROMO, RENE Bourque, a sportscaster’s LAPEL, SKI TRAIL, CAM Newton, GRIDIRON, number ONE ranking, Nascar CUP, PEP rally, boxing MATCH, and Mexican boxer ERIK Morales.
No ugly pile-ups of unfamiliar names crossing each other. I liked this puzzle despite not really being much of a sports fan. “Beware the ides of March,” sayeth the soothsayer in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar (Act I, scene ii). 105a [Time to beware, found in eight of the across answers) IDES, which is indeed to be found nestled among the words of the theme fill. Anyway, this is a timely theme, as next Thursday is that unfortunate date. If the puzzle were to be published next week, the warning would be too late. Well, for Caesar it’s 2,054 years too late, but that’s a mere quibble, eh? The clues follow a standard format, and try to frame the answer as something to beware of, with middling success. Nice variation in how IDES is divided. IDES|, one ID|ES, and one I|The symmetricist in me would have liked the revealer at 105d to have been counterbalanced by something else relevant to the theme. The most obvious four-letter entry would be the crossword staple ET TU (Brute), but it’d be a feat, seeing as that entry crosses the first across themer.