Previous page Next page Bottom Top One level up Home
Home > Directory > Shopping > Crafts > Fiber Arts [2] > Quilts [4] > Memory and T-Shirt

Memory and T-Shirt

Webpages concerning "Memory and T-Shirt"

Family Photo Quilt
http://www.familyphotoquilt.com/
Keywords:
photo quilt, memory quilt, quilt, photo quilts, picture quilt, picture quilts, memory quilts, quilting, photo, photo repair, photo restoration, photo editing

http://www.familyphotoquilt.com/

T-shirt memory quilts, wrap yourself in your memories with a quilt made from your own collection of t-shirts.
http://www.tshirtquilt.com/
Keywords:
quilt, quilting, memories, design, sports, gifts, t-shirt, christmas, wedding, graduation, present, biking, fabric, women, womyn, custom, Indiana, Michiana, South Bend, Mishawaka, Elkhart, Niles, Michigan, women in business

http://www.tshirtquilt.com/

Campus Quilt Company makes quilts with your favorite t-shirts that keep track of your memories for you.
http://www.campusquilt.com/
Keywords:
quilts, t-shirt, quilt, tee-shirt, teeshirt, tshirt, t shirt, blanket, cover, marathon, memory, keepsake, quilt, t-shirt quilt, t-shirt pillow, tee-shirt, teeshirt, memory, tshirt, blanket, cover, college, fraternity, sports, campus, marathon, leigh, bowen, louisville, ky, greek, sheet, bedspread, comforter, jersey, shirt quilt, sorority, keepsake quilt

http://www.campusquilt.com/

Quilt Gallery, Memory Photo quilts, MemoryPet Photo quilts, Quilted Christmas Stockings, Quilt S*W*A*P*S,Quilt-Sew-Fun Newsletter.
http://www.quilts-etc.com/
Keywords:
Quilts for sale, Custom made, Memory photo, Christmas stockings, Art Wallhanging, Traditional, Contemporary, made-to-order, pillows, stuffed animals, table runners, placemats, Satisfaction Guaranteed, Money Back, S*W*A*P*S, Newsletter

http://www.quilts-etc.com/

Family Heirloom Photo Quilts will turn your treasured photos into a beautiful photo quilt, a handcrafted treasure that will become an instant family heirloom.
http://www.customphotoquilts.com/
Keywords:
custom, photo, photograph, photographs, picture, pictures, memory, memories, t-shirt, T-shirt, heritage, quilt, quilts, blanket, blankets, special, edition, elegant, velvet, lace, metallic, gold, fabric, american, flag, wall, hanging, reproduction, keepsake, treasure, heirloom, family, friends, memento

http://www.customphotoquilts.com/

photo quilts are one the most unique gifts you can make, Have your life, one best memory quilted.
http://www.quiltedlives.com/
Keywords:
photo quilt, gift, gift ideas, memory, heirloom quilt, passed, on, from, generation, to, generation, present, quilting, photo transfer, anniversary, birthday, graduation, baby, wedding, vacation, life, past, immortalized, family, mother's day, father's day, christmas

http://www.quiltedlives.com/

Tee-Quilts creates tee-shirt quilts for all occasions. Each quilt is hand-crafted by company founder, Sandy Kurker in Indianapolis Indiana.
http://www.tee-quilts.com/
Keywords:
running, quilts, t-shirt, tee-shirt, tshirt, tee shirt, teequilts, tee-quilts, tquilts, t-quilts, sports, gifts, father's day, christmas, valentine's day, memory, graduation, fraternity, sorority, mother's day, birthday, bicycle, pillow

http://www.tee-quilts.com/

Preserve your memories by ordering a custom made t-shirt quilt. These quilts are individually and personally designed and sewn. We have an image gallery featuring quilts as they are created.
http://www.wildzipper.com/
Keywords:
t-shirt quilt, tshirt quilt, custom quilts, quilt, t-shirt quilts, teeshirt quilts, memory quilt, t shirt, Jennifer Nilson, Roscoe IL

http://www.wildzipper.com/

Transform a drawer of t-shirts into a lifetime of memories
http://www.t-shirtquilts.com/
Keywords:
T-shirt quilt, tshirt quilt, t-shirt quilts, tshirt quilts, keepsake quilt, theme quilts, keepsake theme quilt, quilts, made, from, t-shirts, Quilts, T-shirt, Deaf, Collections, Memorabilia, Sports, Graduation, Commemorative, Keepsake, Vacation, Marathon, Cheerleading, Team, Memories, Blanket, Comforter, Souvenir, Graduation Gift, Cheerleading, Personalized, Holiday, Hobbies, Theme, ...

http://www.t-shirtquilts.com/

We create your design for draperies, cornices, valances, bedspreads, quilts, pillows and more
http://www.quiltsandpillows.com/
Keywords:
workroom, drapery workroom, designer workroom, cornices, cornices window, cornices custom, custom drapery, drapery, bed spread, bed quilted spread, personalized pillow, decorative pillow

http://www.quiltsandpillows.com/

Hand made patchwork blankets with photos, any size, any color, any number of photos, any occasion.
http://www.geocities.com/memoryblankets/
Keywords:
memory, blanket, blankets, memory blankets, photos, gifts, special occasion, patchwork, crafts, Martee, blanket of memories, restoration, restore, refinish, refinishing, gift, homemade, hand-made, handmade, hand made, home-made, home made, pictures, quilt, quilts

http://www.geocities.com/memoryblankets/

Creative Quilts specializes in the creation of custom made Traditional and Contemporary Patchwork Quilts, Childhood Memory Quilts, Art Quilts, T-Shirt Quilts, Photo Transfer Quilts, Memorial Quilts, Wedding Dress Quilts, Handkerchief Quilts, Friendship Quilts, and Signature Quilts made from your memorabilia. Also offering quilt repair and an online boutique carrying a selection of finished quilts...
http://www.creativequilts.com/
Keywords:
T-shirt, quilts, t-shirts, machine, quilting, services, shirts, clothing, memorabilia, traditional, contemporary, patchwork, sports, childhood, memory, handkerchief, anniversary, wedding, dress, friendship, signature, quilts, children's, kid's, art, duplication, reproduction, bed, coverings, linens, wall, hangings, bereavement, deceased, jerseys, sweatshirts, booties, mittens, machine, ...

http://www.creativequilts.com/

Custom quilted Pet Portraits, Pet and Sports silhouette quilts.
http://www.northerncomfortquilts.com/
Keywords:
custom quilts, pet portraits, quilted pet portraits, pet quilts, sports quilts, tooth pillows, custom quilting.

http://www.northerncomfortquilts.com/

"quilts,
http://www.linda-matthews.com/
Keywords:
"quilt

http://www.linda-matthews.com/

http://www.photofabrications.com/
Keywords:
Photofabrications, Photofabrique, Fabric Art, Fabric Photos, Photo Transfer, Photo Art, Photo Applique, Photo Quilt, Photo Fabric, Julianne Kravetz, Quilter's Square

http://www.photofabrications.com/

T-shirt quilts made from college, fraternity/sorority, civic clubs, sports, charity drives, or other event.
http://www.geocities.com/tshirtquilts2000/
Keywords:
quilt, memorabilia, gift, Christmas, graduation, college, fraternity, sorority, sports, football, nostalgia, keepsake, unique, civic organization, charity

http://www.geocities.com/tshirtquilts2000/

Your precious family photographs and documents photo transfered onto fabric and combined with other material and items of memorabilia to create a quilt of memories to be hung on the wall.
http://www.memorywallquilts.com/
Keywords:
quilts, quilting, quilted, art, memory, wall, mementos, photographs, lace, ribbons, buttons, documents, wall, embroidery, fabric, hand, sewing, applique

http://www.memorywallquilts.com/

http://www.nanasquilting.com/

http://www.nanasquilting.com/

http://www.sewsmithhome.com/

http://www.sewsmithhome.com/

http://tlcspecialties.tripod.com/

http://tlcspecialties.tripod.com/

http://www.t-shirt-quilts.com/

http://www.t-shirt-quilts.com/

http://doodlequilts.tripod.com/

http://doodlequilts.tripod.com/

http://www.msddecatur.k12.in.us/ms/chapman/crafts.htm

http://www.msddecatur.k12.in.us/ms/chapman/crafts.htm

http://home.att.net/~PSHQuilts/

http://home.att.net/~PSHQuilts/

All photo, tee shirt and traditional quilts are hand-crafted American made. I transfer your treasured photos to fabric. A Photo Memory Quilt that will make lasting Memories. A gift for all occasions. I will turn your t-shirts into a T-Shirt Memory Quilt to be treasured. Traditional patchwork quilts custom order.
http://www.geocities.com/idgie72653/

http://www.geocities.com/idgie72653/

http://www.melsquilts.com/

http://www.melsquilts.com/

http://www.angelfire.com/wi/tchyy/kaysquilts.html

http://www.angelfire.com/wi/tchyy/kaysquilts.html

Help building the largest human-edited directory of the web
Suggest URL - Open Directory Project - Become an editor
directopedia.org uses links and structure from dmoz Open Directory Project.
The contents has been generating using technology developed by scientec.

Wikipedia-Article "Memory"

For other uses, see Memory (disambiguation).

Memory is the ability to retain information, a faculty of the brain. Memory is studied extensively in the fields of cognitive psychology and neuroscience. There are several ways of classifying memories, based on duration, nature and retrieval of information. From an information processing perspective there are three main stages in the formation and retrieval of memory:

  • Encoding (processing and combining of received information)
  • Storage (creation of a permanent record of the encoded information)
  • Retrieval/Recall (calling back the stored information in response to some cue for use in some process or activity)

Contents

Classification by duration

A basic and generally accepted classification of memory is based on the duration of memory retention, and identifies three distinct types of memory: sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.

The sensory memory corresponds approximately to the initial moment that an item is perceived. Some of this information in the sensory area proceeds to the sensory store, which is referred to as short-term memory. Sensory memory is characterized by the duration of memory retention from milliseconds to seconds and short-term memory from seconds to minutes.

These stores are generally characterised as of strictly limited capacity and duration, whereas in general stored information can be retrieved in a period of time which ranges from days to years; this type of memory is called long-term memory.

It may be that short-term memory is supported by transient changes in neuronal communication, whereas long-term memories are maintained by more stable and permanent changes in neural structure that are dependent on protein synthesis. Some psychologists, however, argue that the distinction between long- and short-term memories is arbitrary, and is merely a reflection of differing levels of activation within a single store.

If we are given a random seven-digit number, we may remember it only for a few seconds and then forget (short-term memory). On the other hand, we can remember telephone numbers for many years (assuming we use them often enough). Those long-lasting memories are said to be stored in long-term memory.

Additionally, the term working memory is used to refer to the short-term store needed for certain mental tasks - it is not a synonym for short-term memory, since it is defined not in terms of duration, but rather in terms of purpose. Some theories consider working memory to be the combination of short-term memory and some attentional control. For instance, when we are asked to mentally multiply 45 by 4, we have to perform a series of simple calculations (additions and multiplications) to arrive at the final answer. The ability to store the information regarding the instructions and intermediate results is what is referred to as working memory.

Classification by information type

Long-term memory, the largest part of any model, can be divided into declarative (explicit) and procedural (implicit) memories.

Declarative memory requires conscious recall, in that some conscious process must call back the information. It is sometimes called explicit memory, since it consists of information that is explicitly stored and retrieved.

Declarative memory can be further sub-divided into semantic memory, which concerns facts taken independent of context; and episodic memory, which concerns information specific to a particular context, such as a time and place. Semantic memory allows the encoding of abstract knowledge about the world, such as "Paris is the capital of France". Episodic memory, on the other hand, is used for more personal memories, such as the sensations, emotions, and personal associations of a particular place or time. Autobiographical memory - memory for particular events within one's own life - is generally viewed as either equivalent to, or a subset of, episodic memory. Visual memory is part of memory preserving some characteristics of our senses pertaining to visual experience. We are able to place in memory information that resembles objects, places, animals or people in sort of a mental image. Visual memory can result in priming and it is assumed some kind of perceptual representational system or PRS underlies this phenomenon. [1]

In contrast, procedural memory (or implicit memory) is not based on the conscious recall of information, but on implicit learning. Procedural memory is primarily employed in learning motor skills and should be considered a subset of implicit memory. It is revealed when we do better in a given task due only to repetition - no new explicit memories have been formed, but we are unconsciously accessing aspects of those previous experiences. Procedural memory involved in motor learning depends on the cerebellum and basal ganglia.

So far, nobody has successfully been able to isolate the time dependence of these suggested memory structures.

Classification by temporal direction

A further major way to distinguish different memory functions is whether the content to be remembered is in the past, retrospective memory, or whether the content is to be remembered in the future, prospective memory. Thus, retrospective memory as a category includes semantic memory and episodic/ autobiographical memory. In contrast, prospective memory is memory for future intentions, or remembering to remember (Winograd, 1988). Prospective memory can be further broken down into event- and time-based prospective remembering. Time-based prospective memories are triggered by a time-cue, such as going to the doctor (action) at 4pm (cue). Event-based prospective memories are intentions triggered by cues, such as remembering to post a letter (action) after seeing a mailbox (cue). Cues do not need to be related to the action (as the mailbox example is), and lists, sticky-notes, knotted hankerchiefs, or string around the finger (see box) are all examples of cues that are produced by people as a strategy to enhance prospective memory.

Physiology

Tying ribbon or string around a finger is the iconic mnemonic device for remembering a particular thought, which one consciously trains oneself to associate with the string.
Enlarge
Tying ribbon or string around a finger is the iconic mnemonic device for remembering a particular thought, which one consciously trains oneself to associate with the string.

Overall, the mechanisms of memory are not well understood. Brain areas such as the hippocampus, the amygdala, or the mammillary bodies are thought to be involved in certain kinds of memory. For example, the hippocampus is believed to be involved in spatial learning and declarative learning. Damage to certain areas in patients and animal models and subsequent memory deficits is a primary source of information. However, rather than implicating a specific area, it could be that damage to adjacent areas, or to a pathway traveling through the area is actually responsible for the observed deficit. Further, it is not sufficient to describe memory, and its counterpart, learning, as solely dependent on specific brain regions. Learning and memory are attributed to changes in neuronal synapses, thought to be mediated by long-term potentiation and long-term depression.

Disorders

Much of the current knowledge of memory has come from studying memory disorders. Loss of memory is known as amnesia. There are many sorts of amnesia, and by studying their different forms, it has become possible to observe apparent defects in individual sub-systems of the brain's memory systems, and thus hypothesize their function in the normally working brain.

Artistic connections

Artworks often explore the nature of memory. The film Memento, about a man afflicted with anterograde amnesia, reflects on the nature and meaning of memory, and implications of its loss. The paintings of Howard Hodgkin, while apparently abstract, are said by the artist to be representations of his memories and their emotional associations. The late works of the 20th-century composer Morton Feldman explore the nature of memory and methods through which it can be disorientated. Several works of the Czech author Milan Kundera explore the nature of personal memory in relation to social or historical memory, especially the novels Ignorance, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, and Immortality.

See also

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Look up Memory in Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Further reading

Draaisma D (2005) Why Life Speeds Up As You Get Older: how memory shapes our past (CUP, Cambridge).

External links

This article is based on the article "Memory" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.

Wikipedia-Article "T-Shirt"

T-shirt laid flat, showing its characteristic "T" shape
Enlarge
T-shirt laid flat, showing its characteristic "T" shape

A T-shirt (or tee shirt) is a shirt, usually buttonless, collarless and pocketless, with a round neck and short sleeves, pulled on over the head. There are also long-sleeved T-shirt and sleeveless T-shirt variants.

T-shirts were originally worn as undershirts. This still occurs, but T-shirts are now also frequently worn as the only piece of clothing on the top half of the body (except that women usually wear a bra beneath it).

A T-shirt typically extends to the waist, although one fashion is for "oversized" T-shirts. A more recent trend in women's clothing involves tight-fitting "cropped" T-shirts that are short enough to reveal the lower abdomen including the belly button. T-shirt fashions include styles for men and women, and for all age groups, including baby, youth and adult sizes. T-shirts are often decorated with text and/or pictures.

T-shirts are manufactured by the textile industry. They are typically made of cotton or polyester fibers (or a mix of the two), knitted together in a jersey stitch that gives a T-shirt its distinctive soft texture.

Contents

T-shirt history

An example of a tie-dye t-shirt
Enlarge
An example of a tie-dye t-shirt

The idea of the T-shirt came to the USA during WWI when US soldiers noticed the light cotton undershirts European soldiers were using while the US soldiers sweated in their wool uniforms. Since they were so much more comfortable they quickly became popular among the Americans, and because of their design they got the name T-shirt. During WWII the T-shirt had become standard issue underwear in both the U.S. Army and Navy.

After WWII the T-shirt started appearing without a shirt covering it. John Wayne, Marlon Brando and James Dean all wore them on national TV. At first the public was shocked but by 1955 it had become acceptable. The T-shirt became cool when James Dean wore it in the film Rebel Without A Cause.

T-shirt decoration

T-shirts with bold slogans were popular in the UK in the 1980s
Enlarge
T-shirts with bold slogans were popular in the UK in the 1980s

In the 1960s, the Ringer T-shirt appeared and became a staple fashion for youth and rock-n-rollers. People also started to tie-dye and screen-print the basic T-shirt and variants such as the tank top, wife beater, muscle shirt, scoop neck, V-neck etc. became popular.

Since then T-shirts have become a medium for self-expression and advertising, with any imaginable combination of words, art and even photographs on display.

Other methods of decoration used on T-shirts include airbrush, applique, embroidery, and the ironing on of either flock lettering, heat transfers, or Dye sublimation transfers. Laser printers are capable of printing on plain paper using a special Transfer Toner containing sublimation dyes which can then be permanently heat-transferred to T-shirts.

In the 1980s, thermochromatic dyes were used to produce T-shirts that changed colour when subjected to heat. This brand of T-shirt, Global Hypercolour, was a common sight on the streets of the UK for a few years, but has since mostly disappeared. These kind of T-shirts are still being produced, however, and are available to buy over the internet.

Since the late 1980s and especially the 1990s, T-shirts with prominent brand-name logos have been popular, especially with teenagers and young adults. These garments allowed consumers to flaunt their taste in designer brands in an inexpensive way, in addition to being decorative. While critics claim that wearing such logos serve only to advertise for clothing designers without being paid, brand-name T-shirts remain popular. Examples: Calvin Klein, FUBU, Ralph Lauren, The Gap

The late 1990s saw the renewed popularity of T-shirts with simple slogans and designs. The trend was most visible in 2004 when popularized by celebrities such as Britney Spears and Paris Hilton. Also notable that year was the popularity of political slogans and messages on T-shirts, coinciding with a presidential election.

Further reading

See also

External links

This article is based on the article "T-Shirt" from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License. Here you find the list of authors of this article. The article can only edited within Wikipedia. Edit this article in Wikipedia.