Get a load of Email Me buttons by Cathe Holden

Cathe has Twitter buttons too!

…and she has comment buttons… Go Cathe!

Cute blog buttons by  Oh, hello friend

Desktop Patterns

The cutest Blogger backgrounds in EVERY color by Chelsea at Aqua Poppy Designs

Graphics Fairy Vintage free blog backgrounds.

FREE texture stock photos at Grunge Textures and Urban Dirty.

Yasmine from A Print A Day has these gorgeous patterns you can download.

januarydownload-1

[ad#Google Ad- 200 image]

Share the fun!

Similar Posts

21 Comments

  1. Buttons

    Collecting buttons has been one of the most popular hobbies of all times. Buttons can be used for a variety of purposes, right from holding a coat secure, to card-making and appliqué-work. But most importantly buttons add a touch of beauty and colour to life. Buttons are one of those little joys that create life delightful.

    Some museums and art galleries hold culturally, historically, politically, and/or artistically significant buttons in their collections.
    The Victoria & Albert Museum has many buttons, particularly
    in its jewellery collection, as does the Smithsonian Institution.

    Hammond Turner & Sons, a button-making company in Birmingham, hosts an online museum with an image gallery and historical button-related articles, including an 1852 article on button-making by Charles Dickens. In the USA, large button collect are on public display at The Waterbury Button Museum of Waterbury, Connecticut, and the Keep Homestead Museum of Monson, Massachusetts, which also hosts an extensive online button archive.

    Early button history

    Buttons and button-like objects used as ornaments or seals rather than fasteners have been discovered in the Indus Valley Civilization during its Kot Diji phase (circa 2800-2600 BCE) as well as Bronze Age sites in China (circa 2000-1500 BCE), and Ancient Rome.
    Buttons made from seashell were used in the Indus Valley Civilization for ornamental purposes by 2000 BCE. Some buttons were carved into geometric shapes and had holes pierced into them so that they could be attached to clothing with thread. Ian McNeil (1990) holds that: “The button, in fact, was originally used more as an ornament than as a fastening, the earliest known being found at Mohenjo-daro in the Indus Valley. It is made of a curved shell and about 5000 years old.”
    Functional buttons with buttonholes for fastening or closing clothes appeared first in Germany in the 13th century. They soon became widespread with the rise of snug-fitting garments in 13th- and 14th-century Europe.

    Clothing Buttons.

  2. Wow just found a link to your site this morning and i am totally upgrading my blog with the instructions and links that you have shared here and i am loving it 🙂
    thanks

Comments are closed.