Knit Beanie Hat Slouchy Off -White Pebbly Stitch Diagonal Pattern Wool Acrylic or 100% Acrylic – For Cool, Windy Spring and Fall, and Chinook Days and Nights
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Knit Beanie Slouchy Hat Off White Pebbly Rib
Knit Beanie Hat Off White Slouchy Acrylic Wool
Navy Blue, Purple, Gray Hats with Snug Double Knit Headband Sections for Serious Warmth and Wind Resistance, Looser Overlapping Hat Stitches Above for Circulation. Reversible, Knit in the Round, No Seams.
Other Colors on Request. Knit from Brown Sheep Company Yarn, Produced in Mitchell, Nebraska, U.S.A.
Warm Color for January Cold – Chunky Knit Beanie Slouchy Hat Knotted Rib Rust Red Brown, Burnt Umber, Texas Longhorns, Burnt Orange – Stretchy, Cushiony, Light Feel. Reversible, Acrylic or Acrylic Wool – Other Colors on Request.
Hand Knit Navy and Cape Cod Blue Rib Stitch Slouchy or Apres Ski Beanie Hat. Men’s, Women’s, Teens’ Sizes. Reversible. Knit in the Round without Seams. Pom Pom That Buttons In or Out. Other Colors on Request.
Warm Color for January Cold – Chunky Knit Beanie Slouchy Hat Knotted Rib Rust Red Brown, Burnt Umber, Texas Longhorns, Burnt Orange – Stretchy, Cushiony, Light Feel. Reversible, Acrylic or Acrylic Wool – Other Colors on Request.
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Snow Days – Chunky Knit Beanie, Ivory / Off-White Apres Ski Hat with Detachable Pom Pom in White, Turmeric, or Mix of Both
New, handmade with 100% acrylic yarn or wool/acrylic combo. Pom pom buttons into either side. Knit in the round – no back seam.
New for Winter 2015 – Slouchy and Ski-Style Beanies, Hats in Chunky Chain Spill and Ribbed Stitching – Turmeric.
Crocheted Slouch Hats in Varying Patterns and Thick Puffs of Yarn or Nubby Homespun Style – Purple and Lavender Shades, Multicolor Tan, Red, Copper, Off-White.
Fleece Beanie Gaiter Neck Warmer Combo Sets “No Capes!!!”, No Scarves!!! to drop into fan belts, deer racks, or mud, to catch on seat belts, doors, and Christmas trees . . .
The insouciant Slouchy Hat in Muddy Gray and Brown.
Gray material has a polished sheen: wear for sports or dress. Choose a size larger for more slouch and to double over reversible gaiter. Click on the Hats for more information and to order.
Fleece Beanie Slouchy Gaiter Combo Gray Brown Hat
Knit Hat Fleece Neck Gaiter Mimosa Yellow Aqua Gray Green
Fleece Beanie Neck Gaiter Set Aqua Yellow Gray Green
Loom-knit, sunny-colored hat, reversible. No seams. Cuff is knit into place.
Fleece beanie in wave pattern, aqua, mimosa yellow, gray, white, bright green, with cuff. Can be worn as tall ski beanie or with cuff turned up.
Color matching fleece gaiters in zigzag or wave patterns are double layers, reversible For more details and to order small, medium, or large sizes, CLICK the photos.
Fleece beanie and neck gaiter set in gray and blue. Hat has doubled cuff for headband warmth. Gaiter is double-layered, reversible. Request sizes custom made by measurement. For details and to order, click photos or here.
New, extra-thick loom-knit cowl / neckwrap, neckwarmer. Blue, fuschia pink, green, orange, purplish gray, mohair-like yarn. Three buttons to adjust shape and fit. Warm and washable. 100% acrylic. For sledding, hiking, dress, skating, skiing.
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Oh So Light Knit Beanie Cowl Neckwrap Set
Carefree, Featherlight Baby Yarn and Colors for an Oh, Baby! Look
Thick, cotton wrapped yarn handknit into a go-anywhere beanie and cowl neckwarmer. Mix with jackets, sweaters, tops & leggings, jeans, cropped pants, skirts, dresses, indoors and out.
Wear as Mother-Daughter set, cowl as a headband for Mom, beanie for Daughter. Request custom child beanie and adult headband sizes and prices by email or phone, $28 to $38.
For More Colors, Details, and to ORDER, CLICK the Photo.
Surveying the United States of America – History of the American Land Surveyor on the Great Plains of Nebraska – Surveying the Sandhills in 1904 – Art Prints of Oil Painting by Mel Gerhold
A limited edition of 1000 new, full-color commercial lithograph prints on heavy archival paper. Each print is numbered and signed by the artist. Stored in cool, dark, smoke-free environment.
In 1984 Rollin C. Curd of Chadron, Nebraska, commissioned an original oil painting by Mel Gerhold, who lived at that time on a small ranch near Crawford, Nebraska. Mr. Curd, a surveyor with the Bureau of Reclamation, Soil Conservation Service, and U.S. Forest Service for 34 years, was in private practice in Chadron and was also the Dawes County surveyor. He had looked for some time for paintings and drawings of the American surveyor in the West with little success.
Mel Gerhold, who has become well known for his works in private and public collections in the U.S. and abroad, had called to arrange for a land boundary survey. In the course of their discussion Mr. Curd learned that he was a painter of Western subjects. They agreed to an exchange – the survey for a painting of a surveyor at work in Nebraska based on a photograph from Rollin Curd’s collection. In 1984 and 1985 the survey and painting were completed.
The painting offers a typical view of a surveyor at work following the opening of the Sandhills to homesteaders by the Kinkaid Act of 1904. The surveyor is operating a compass and waving his hat to give line for chainmen. The scene is taken from a photograph of a survey crew measuring forest boundaries in the Nebraska Sandhills in 1902. They were preparing for the manual planting of a national forest near Halsey, Nebraska. The surveyor depicted in the painting is Louis C. Miller from Stillwater, Oklahoma.
A synopsis of the story behind the painting is enclosed with each print:
“On July 1, 1901, seven Forestry students met in Kearney, NE, to begin a reconnaissance survey of the Sandhills and Western Nebraska to determine the feasibility of planting trees in the Sandhills. They purchased a covered wagon, grub box, mules, saddle horses, camping equipment and food; then traveled westerly up the Platte and North Platte River Valleys, observing the location and size of Pine and Cedar trees. . . .”
The painting is rare for several reasons. Mr. Gerhold paints for himself and accepts commissions. He almost never paints from a photograph. As Mr. Curd had learned, paintings of land surveyors at work were rare to non-existent. He writes about the early Nebraska surveyor in the dedication of his book, p. iv,
A History of the Boundaries of Nebraska and Indian-Surveyor Stories, The Boundaries Publishing Company, Chadron, Nebraska, 1999:
Their notes and plats are filed in the courthouses of 93 counties. Little has been written of their personal trials and hardships.
Many of these men were Civil War veterans. Some were schooled from Eastern colleges, some from West Point, some from the military Corps of Engineers, some from on-the-job training. Their surveys marked on the ground the Rectangular System that provided monuments for homesteaders to build their fences and receive a deed of ownership from the United States Government. For the immigrants, who had little opportunity to own land in their native countries, the American dream could be fulfilled.
The early surveyors wore rough cotton clothing and boots. Frequent rain, hail, and snowstorms drove them to dig holes in the sand or cower under big trees, but not many trees were available. The cook wagon and tents were the only shelter in most camps. The compassman, chainmen, and moundsmen were often caught by storms during the dawn to dusk workday, miles from camp. They had to carry water in a canteen but could not carry enough on a hot day. Springs and streams were scarce in Western Nebraska. Chewing on grass to bring up saliva could help when canteen was dry. The Indians and fur traders could travel the river valleys, but the surveyors had to measure each square mile of our State up and down hills. Their footsteps, like ghosts of the past crossing the prairies, preceded the fence builders.
Surveyors did not carry first-aid kits in those days. The prairie rattler would strike if startled. The men had to carry rifles and ammunition in Indian country. With a canteen, chain, pins, stakes, shovels, and compass, the survey crew walked in excess of 20 miles per day. Their meals were monotonous, with biscuits, bacon, beans, and coffee. In September, they could find wild plums, chokecherries, and sand cherries.
Families did not accompany the survey crew. They were separated from April to November with no telephones or mail service.
The prints are 16″ x 20″ and ship in a heavy flat cardboard mailer or tube. They are $41.00 + shipping. Please contact us if ordering more than one print. Order weights must be combined manually to provide a lower shipping rate. FOR DETAILS AND TO ORDER, CLICK HERE.
To learn about the extraordinary place called the Sandhills of Nebraska, visit Sandhills Journey
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All Natural Handcrafted Soaps, Scrubs, Lotion Bars, Salves, Lip Balms – Scents of Carrot Cake, Columbine, Cucumber Lily, and More, . . .
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