Ballet Shoes Monogram Svg, Bow Svg, Ballerina Svg, Split Monogram Svg, Cricut File, Silhouette Digital, Dance Svg, Frame, Dancer - New Arrivals

If you intend to purchase more than 2 items, please, check my home page "Announcement" bar : https://www.etsy.com/shop/kArtCreationII, for more Coupon Code DISCOUNTS.Ballet Shoes monogram(#273-2): SVG/DXF/PNG/PDF This is a perfect design for print or machine cut, using different materials paper, vinyl, to be applied on mugs, tumblers, glasses, t-shirts, pillows, acrylic blanks, tote bags, towels, wood signs, canvas, to create cutouts for scrapbooking, paper crafts, greeting cards. And many other uses like laser cut or engraving. The possibilities are endless. This item is an INSTANT DOWNLOAD that contains digital files= INCLUDED FILES ===================================You will receive a ZIP folder, inside with the following format files:*** SVG format - for Cutting programs/softwares like Silhouette Cameo(Designer Edition - paid version), Cricut Explore and Scan N Cut;*** DXF format - Auto Cad cutting file for Silhouette Studio(without Designer Edition - free version) or laser cut;*** PDF format - for print or laser cut, engraving;*** PNG format - high resolution (300 dpi)transparent background; for print or other clip art overlays projects.!!! PLEASE, make sure your machine/software can work with one of the above file formats before you purchase.= PLEASE NOTE ========================================- Your downloaded files are compressed into a single ZIP file. You will need to UNZIP the files before you’ll be able to access them. - No watermarks. Backgrounds are not included. Monogram Font not included.- No physical item will be shipped. After payment, download your files directly from the site. =Commercial use=====================================YOU MAY USE them FOR SMALL BUSINESS.(maximum of 200 items per design SALES of physical items)Do not use them for mass production. Use the design to create PHYSICAL items (shirts, cups, signs, cards, etc.) Selling/distributing a DIGITAL version of the designs (even if changes are applied) is not allowed. IS NOT ALLOWED for commercial purposes:- to print the design on vinyls, iron on transfers, to cut and to sell them as iron-on or decals;- to digitize in other raster or vector formats-to sell on sites with prints on demand (Caffe Press, Prinful, Zazzle, Tee Spring, Amazon etc.)For EMBROIDERY DIGITIZE COMMERCIAL LICENSE follow this link:https://www.etsy.com/listing/674616162/commercial-license-for-embroidery?ref=shop_home_active_1&frs=1If you want an EXTENDED commercial LICENSE please contact me via Etsy mail.======================================================All of the works are copyrighted, please, do not copy.Happy Crafting!!!Kornelya.

Sunnyvale Rotary: Meetings are Tuesdays at noon. Elks Club, 375 N. Pastoria Ave. Sunnyvalerotary.org. Sunnyvale Squares: Singles, couples and former dancers ages 18 and up can learn modern Western square dancing. No partner is needed. Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. Murphy Park, 250 N. Sunnyvale Ave., Sunnyvale. $25 per month/$7 per session. Sunnyvalesquares.com, 408-744-1021. Dementia/Alzheimer’s Support Group: A safe, confidential, supportive environment for families to develop informal mutual support, get information about dementia and develop methods and skills to solve problems related to dementia. Fourth Tuesday of the month. Sunnyvale Presbyterian Church gym, 728 Fremont Ave., room 750, Sunnyvale. For more information, call the Alzheimer’s Association at 800-272-3900.

Eating Disorders and Body Image Support Groups: The Eating Disorders Resource Center offers free support groups to create a safe space for those struggling with eating disorders and body image dissatisfaction, The groups are unstructured and open to all ages, genders and types of eating issues, First and third Tuesdays of the month, ballet shoes monogram svg, bow svg, ballerina svg, split monogram svg, cricut file, silhouette digital, dance svg, frame, dancer 7-8:30 p.m, El Camino Hospital, 2500 Grant Road, Mountain View, Open Gardens: Charles Street Gardens opens its gates to the public, Tuesdays, 11 a.m.-1 p.m, 433 Charles St., Sunnyvale, Charlesstreetgardens.org..

By Katharina Woodman. How many people do you know who live in the house in which they grew up? In the rural community where I was raised, quite a few, but in Silicon Valley? Not so many. Sunnyvale’s John Sekulo is definitely a rare find, living in his parents’ two-bedroom home on Sunnyvale Avenue where he was born in 1924. The modest house has a long kitchen, and a screened-in porch, typical for the era. His parents had come from the former Yugoslavia, his father, Anton (everybody called him Tony) from Herzegovina, and his mother, Mary, from Slano in Croatia, but they met in Sunnyvale. Mary was the sister of Tony’s friend.

When Mary and ballet shoes monogram svg, bow svg, ballerina svg, split monogram svg, cricut file, silhouette digital, dance svg, frame, dancer Tony were married in 1921, they moved into the brand new house on Sunnyvale Avenue where they went on to raise their four children: two girls and two boys, John grew up in a home where his parents spoke Yugoslavian but he and his siblings spoke English, He remembers fondly visiting the Joshua Hendy Iron Works factory where his father worked as a chipper for 25 years, That was good work for an immigrant with little education and even less English, In his youth, his neighborhood was diverse; families from Portugal, Yugoslavia, Spain and Italy filled the homes along his streets, Some neighbors worked alongside his dad, others were entrepreneurs; there was a contracting business and a trucking company, He and his friends  played outside; roller skating and running their box scooters, or on the spinner in the school yard, They worked in the orchards during school breaks, cutting apricots on the other side of Carroll Street, or picking prunes (which he wasn’t too fond of)..

During his high school years, young John worked for the Purity grocery store, right down the road, delivering groceries and stocking shelves, delivering newspapers—including to the Murphy house—on his bike. The family used to attend services at the Catholic church on the block, and John remembers the nuns as very strict. In those days, the young men were pulled into the voluntary fire department and trained in fire fighting because they knew the chief and other people in the department: Frank and Bert White, and Billy Wetterstrom, (the barber on Murphy Avenue); all of the businessmen back then served as volunteer firemen. Everything happened within, and for, the community, in those days.

In his senior year of high school, when the U.S, joined WWII, John quit school to enlist at The Peninsula Defense Training Center in Mountain View where he learned to work sheet metal, Right out of this course, he was hired in 1942 to work at the Naval Air Station Moffett Federal Airfield, In 1943, he was drafted for war service and was originally trained for radio communications, but then worked as a ball turret gunner, He never went overseas, but traveled around the U.S., with stints in Florida and South Dakota. After the war, John worked for the Food Machinery Corporation, but when he was laid off, he ballet shoes monogram svg, bow svg, ballerina svg, split monogram svg, cricut file, silhouette digital, dance svg, frame, dancer returned to Moffett Field and worked in the machine shop for 27 years, much like his dad, He played racquetball with friends, bringing coffee in thermoses and cookies during a break in the game, John, his first wife and their son lived in Mountain View and San José, always close enough to look after his parents in Sunnyvale..

When his father was ailing, John moved back into his childhood home to care for him. Nothing much had been changed in the house. John enclosed the porch with windows and added some storage units to the back, but otherwise it stayed untouched. In 1998, John took a family trip to Yugoslavia and while he connected with an aunt and cousins, he was disheartened to no longer share their language. Back home, he became a regular at the senior lunch at St. Thomas’ Church where he would join the dancing to live music.

“There were a lot of good dancers there.”, he said, winking, Today, ballet shoes monogram svg, bow svg, ballerina svg, split monogram svg, cricut file, silhouette digital, dance svg, frame, dancer arthritis plagues his hip, so he’s had to slow down, but he’s still at the church on the daily basis to count the money coming in through the dances. He has donated several of his photographs to the Sunnyvale Heritage Park Museum, including a staff photo from Hendy and a class photo from Fremont High School, He attended the opening of the museum’s special exhibit on “Hendy Iron Men” and returned several times to view the exhibit, Last summer, he was a guest at the dedication of the new panels in the Orchard Heritage Park Interpretive Exhibit Pavilion, which added the names of many Yugoslav orchardists..



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