flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl

SKU: EN-M20428

flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl

flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl

flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl

“I needed to be closer to help,” Brooks said. “Thankfully my granddaughter is fine now and she also has a little sister.”. Brooks, who always created art, took up jewelry making full-time in 2008, after a 30-year career as a U.S. probation officer. Her home studio is filled with necklaces, earrings, bracelets and belts made with copper, silver, wire, wood, bone, African beads, and precious stone. Each piece is full of color and texture and one of a kind. “I bought some beads at a show in Texas,” Brooks said of her jewelry origins, “made some stuff for myself and people bought it off my neck.”.

de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University, “Beyond Function: Fiber, Fabric and Finery,” work by textile artist Judith Content, Through flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl Dec, 2, de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University, 500 El Camino Real, Santa Clara, www.scu.edu/desaisset, Gallery House, Holiday show, Through Dec, 24, Reception 6-8 p.m, Nov, 16, 11 a.m, to 8 p.m, Mondays to Saturdays; 11 a.m, to 3 p.m, Sundays, Gallery House, 320 California Ave., Palo Alto, www.galleryhouse2.com or 650-326-1668, Gallery 9, “Miniatures and More!” Small works from 30 artists, Reception 5-7:30 p.m, Dec, 7, Exhibit runs through Dec, 24, Gallery 9, 143 Main St., Los Altos, 11 a.m.-5 p.m, Tuesdays-Saturdays, noon-4p.m, Sundays, 650-941-7969 or www.gallery9losaltos.com..

Dane’s Friends Benefit Concert: The fourth annual Dane’s Friends for FIRSTconcert and silent auction benefiting the Foundation for Ichthyosis and Related Skin Types features “America’s Got Talent” Season 9 finalists Sons of Serendip. Sept. 12, 6:30 p.m. Flint Center for the Performing Arts, 21250 Stevens Creek Blvd., Cupertino. $29 and up. danesfriendsforfirst.com. Senior Nutrition Program: Hot meals served along with camaraderie. Must be 60 years or older and a resident of Santa Clara County. Monday-Friday; live dance music at 9:30 a.m.; lunch at 11 a.m. First United Methodist Church, 535 Old San Francisco Road, Sunnyvale. sunnyvaleumc.org/mission/seniornutrition.html.

It’s a gripping little detail, rich with tragic history, that grounds Luis Valdez’s sweeping new drama “Valley of the Heart” in its world premiere at San Jose Stage Company, If this unwieldy epic falters under the weight of its own heroic ambitions, there’s no denying the compelling nature of flat shoes aqua blue trims on ballet style slipper - aqua blue flat shoes, white satin flats, ribbon lace up flats, something bl this deeply-impassioned political narrative, Valdez, a legendary figure in Latino theater famed for “Zoot Suit” and “La Bamba,” has so many stories to tell here that he sometimes forces too much information into every scene, The three-hour show is often more effective as a history lesson than as an emotional arc, Still, the history has a sense of urgency to it, a feeling that someone must bear witness to the past, particularly one that transpired in our own backyard..

Skupa, who collapsed and died while riding his bicycle on Feb. 1 in North Berkeley, made Ashkenaz his home away from home, sometimes four nights a week, and was both a board member passionate about music and its resident handyman, fixing plumbing issues and changing the marquee. If there was an emergency, “we’d call Gary,” said Emily Earl, also a board member. Then they’d wait. Skupa, friends fondly remember, lived by his own clock, dubbed “The Gary Skupa Greenwich Meridian Mean Time appointment system” in a 1991 poem by Bob Randolph.