I can suddenly imagine living in a world where cartoon characters are real (ala Who Framed Rodger Rabbit.) EVERYTHING WOULD TRY TO BITE YOU AND THEN LAUGH ABOUT IT. How terrifying.
Close! Crochet and embroidery are both kinds of needlework. Wikipedia: 'Needlework is a broad term for the handicrafts of decorative sewing and textile arts. Anything that uses a needle for construction can be called needlework. The definition may expand to include related textile crafts such as a crochet hook or tatting shuttles...' The definition includes embroidery, but crochet and embroidery are not the same thing. A better description therefore might be 'amazing needlework on leaves.'
Nonetheless, the artwork you found is very cool; in that respect, it doesn't matter what term you use. Good find! :)
My theory is that the vulcans from Star Trek are in fact descended from the elves from LOTR. When Middle Earth ended and the various races disappeared, the elves--who were naturally even-tempered, logical and had pointy ears and mystical powers (mind meld, anyone?)--left and went to Vulcan.
I also theorize that Gandalf and Dumbledore from Harry Potter are actually the same wizard. When Dumbledore is absent from Hogwarts--say during a break or something--that's when he's off dealing with the hobbits and the ring. However, those are not children's TV shows, so I digress.
I learned from Endless Ocean that you can find TVs and 'women's magazines' in the Baltic Sea shipwrecks. The TVs are still sellable, too. Pretty sweet. :-P
http://www.imdb.com/media/rm465020160/tt2724064?ref_=tt_ov_i
(I haven't even seen the movie yet...but just look at all that cheese. The poster stands on its own!)
Wikipedia:
'Needlework is a broad term for the handicrafts of decorative sewing and textile arts. Anything that uses a needle for construction can be called needlework. The definition may expand to include related textile crafts such as a crochet hook or tatting shuttles...'
The definition includes embroidery, but crochet and embroidery are not the same thing. A better description therefore might be 'amazing needlework on leaves.'
Nonetheless, the artwork you found is very cool; in that respect, it doesn't matter what term you use. Good find! :)
I also theorize that Gandalf and Dumbledore from Harry Potter are actually the same wizard. When Dumbledore is absent from Hogwarts--say during a break or something--that's when he's off dealing with the hobbits and the ring. However, those are not children's TV shows, so I digress.