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@jadewolf-writes – yesterday was obviously humpback day.
Up now on my eBay (Seller ID: RadioIndy)! Kitz'n'Katz Komiks #3 from 1986! Classic funny animal comic from Bob Laughlin and Eclipse Comics! #comics #comicbooks #kitznkatzkomiks #boblaughlin #eclipsecomics #funnyanimal #furry #furrycomics #1986 #vintagecomics #comiccollector #comicshopgirl #auctions #ebay #radioindy #buymystuff #quarantinehustle
https://www.instagram.com/p/CAncWJnjfDf/?igshid=17tfwrmvr9tzp
Repair Cafés
Repair Cafés are free meeting places and they’re all about repairing things (together). In the place where a Repair Café is located, you’ll find tools and materials to help you make any repairs you need. On clothes, furniture, electrical appliances, bicycles, crockery, appliances, toys, et cetera. You’ll also find expert volunteers, with repair skills in all kinds of fields.
Visitors bring their broken items from home. Together with the specialists they start making their repairs in the Repair Café. It’s an ongoing learning process. If you have nothing to repair, you can enjoy a cup of tea or coffee. Or you can lend a hand with someone else’s repair job. You can also get inspired at the reading table – by leafing through books on repairs and DIY.
There are over 1.500 Repair Cafés worldwide. Visit one in your area or start one yourself!

#Bowl with Human Feet
Period: Predynastic, Late Naqada l–Naqada IIIn the Predynastic Period, potters created a wide variety of ceramic vessels. One unusual type is a bowl with supports shaped like human feet. This simple, round bowl, tipped slightly forward as if to offer its contents, has two such feet solidly attached to its underside. Made from Nile clay, the bowl has a smoothed, slipped, and polished surface, giving it a light sheen. The bowl standing on feet is very similar in form to the Egyptian hieroglyph meaning “to bring.” Since none of the known bowls of this type comes from a well-understood context, archaeologists cannot interpret their original use. Perhaps vessels like this were placed above a tomb to present offerings from the living to the deceased, a practice that was an established part of funerary ritual in pharaonic Egypt. Alternatively, they may have held offerings to a deity in his shrine.
| — | Henri Rousseau to Pablo Picasso (via merelygifted) |



