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  2. 11 Must-Have Christmas Collectibles to Complete Your Holiday ...

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    You can find individual vintage ornaments for a few dollars a piece in antique shops and secondhand stores or discover matching sets online for $25 and up. Rare or complicated designs cost more.

  3. 5 Fall Centerpieces Using Foliage And Blooms That Will ...

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    In a heavy bottomed vessel, place the chicken wire and build the base of the centerpiece with branches, sprigs, and geraniums. Add in dried hydrangeas to fill large gaps. Lastly, add in fresh ...

  4. Jessica Stockholder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jessica_Stockholder

    An often-cited early work, Installation in My Father's Backyard (1983), for example, incorporated painted objects affixed or adjacent to her father's garage, including a double mattress, cupboard door, roll of chicken wire, and rectangular patch of painted grass. [3] [9] [4]

  5. Chicken wire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_wire

    Chicken wire, or poultry netting, is a mesh of wire commonly used to fence in fowl, such as chickens, in a run or coop. It is made of thin, flexible, galvanized steel wire with hexagonal gaps. Available in 1 ⁄ 2 inch (about 1.3 cm), 1 inch (about 2.5 cm) diameter, and 2 inch (about 5 cm), chicken wire is available in various gauges —usually ...

  6. Hāngī - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hāngī

    Common foods cooked in a hāngī are meats such as lamb, pork, chicken and seafood (kaimoana), and vegetables such as potato, kūmara (sweet potato), yams (oca), pumpkin, squash, taro and cabbage. [4] [5] [6] A hāngī pit is dug to a depth of between 50–100 cm (20–40 in), sufficient to hold the rocks and two stacked baskets of food.

  7. Kendra Haste - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendra_Haste

    Kendra Haste is a British wildlife artist who produces both public and privately commissioned sculptures using galvanised chicken wire mesh to create wire sculptures of wild animals. She is a member of the Society of Wildlife Artists, the Royal British Society of Sculptors and the Society of Animal Artists. She lives in Surrey, England