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Ōshima-tsumugi is a traditional craft textile produced in the Amami Islands (mainly Amami Ōshima) in southern Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. It is a hand-woven plain-weave silk cloth dyed in mud. The textile is most commonly used for making kimonos. Oshima-tsumugi kimonos are often simply called Ōshima. Detail of an Oshima kimono up close.
Isle of the Ape is a scenario in which the player characters encounter a gargantuan ape on an isolated island. [2] The module includes two new magic spells, and uses rules from the Unearthed Arcana rulebook. [2] According to From the Ashes, this adventure was set in a demiplane accessed via Castle Tenser. [3]
Several types of raffia cloth are produced for different purposes, the most common form of which is a plain woven cloth that is used as the foundation for decorated textile production. Men produce the cloth on inclined, single-heddle looms and then use it to make their clothing and to supply foundation cloth to female members of their clan section.
The second series of Love Island: All Stars, a spin-off of the reality series Love Island, is set to begin broadcasting on ITV2 in 13 January 2025. [1] It is again set to feature former contestants from previous series. Maya Jama will return to present the series, with Iain Stirling again returning as narrator.
It has an area of just under 25 square kilometres (9 + 1 ⁄ 2 sq mi). The island had a population of ten usual residents in 2001 [9] and of four in 2011. [4] Scalpay is privately owned and operates a red deer farm, shooting estate and holiday cottages.
A fur farm in Ostrobothnia, Finland Map of countries that banned fur farming. A mink farm (after 1900) A mink farm in the United States A mink farm in Poland. Fur farming is the practice of breeding or raising certain types of animals for their fur. Most of the world's farmed fur was produced by European farmers.
An Icelandic farm. The raising of livestock, sheep (the traditional mainstay for generations of Icelandic farmers) and cattle (the latter grew rapidly in the 20th century), [2] is the main occupation, but pigs and poultry are also reared; Iceland is self-sufficient in the production of meat, dairy products and eggs.
In the seventeenth century, this farm was the home of Magnús Jónsson, a wealthy man who collected and commissioned manuscripts. [1] The first reference to Vigur in the written record is from 1194, but it may well have been mentioned earlier under a different name. A windmill, built around 1840, is also located on the island. [2]