Thứ Ba, 12 tháng 6, 2018

Youtube daily Jun 12 2018

for some the furthest point on the southwestern Peninsula of England might

be the ideal vacation spot along the Cornish Riviera adventurous surfers

catch brilliant waves beside gorgeous seaside cliffs while others find peace

in harbor villages like Bowie and Falmouth but one woman's English

vacation proved to be more unnerving than serene when Jess Arneson took a

trip to the beaches of Cornwall she along with everyone else along the

shores that day might have expected a relaxing day in the Sun instead she

witnessed something unsettling hundreds of unidentifiable objects lay scattered

along the sand and just the sight of them sent nearly every beach goer into a

panic while on vacation in Cornwall England the country's southernmost

County which juts out into the Celtic Sea 27 year old Jess Arneson spotted

something she'd never seen before along the beach she spotted an orb that looked

like a vegetable that had begun to rot or an old baseball that had just been

left out in the Sun and chewed on by a dog stranger there wasn't just one or

either there were hundreds of them for Jess the scene was slightly disturbing

the orbs were stretching away as far as you could see along the shoreline

she told the Guardian the ones I saw were a bit smaller than a football but

it's possible there were some that were bigger that made her uneasy I didn't

want to go any further along the beach she said we want the experts to examine

them and let us know if they're safe because quite frankly they really are

weird and a bit scary and she wasn't alone in her fears other locals and

tourists along the shores were equally perplexed by the foreign bodies in fact

a dog walker had an interesting experience with one calling them like

something out of aliens referencing James Cameron's well-known film they're

all over the beach and the dogs really didn't like them

he continued I took what home with me then panicked and put it in a bin in

case it attacked surely that had to be an overreaction

after the public outcry experts finally weighed in on what exactly those

spherical objects were in the process they sued the fears of those worrying

the beaches of Cornwall had been subjected to an alien invasion it turned

out the orbs were actually a species of sea urchin known as a chino cardian

Chordata m-- but the experts gave the urchin another name - one much more

fitting of their similarity to a certain tuberous vegetable say hello to a seed

potato they're quite common at the lower end of the right type of sandy beach

living below the sand and Burroughs said Martin a trill the director of the

Marine Institute at Plymouth University he had more to say - you get lots of

them on tour bay main beach for example Martin continued there related to

starfish and usually covered with little spines still there was something off

about this batch of seed potatoes all these washed up potatoes were dead as

doornails a fact that led to some pretty morbid

theories from the locals had beach goers that day witnessed some bizarre sea

urchin disaster not quite as Martin a trill shown here clarified this was

actually a bit more natural than people suspected I think such things happen

from time to time and are entirely natural a bit like bushfires he added

but how Martin explained that see potatoes group up from their mating

sessions if a vicious storm were to happen with so many potatoes going at it

let's just say it's never good to get caught in a storm with your pants down

still there were other plausible explanations in May of 1995 for instance

there was another epic seed potato episode on a southern coast of England

then the mass fatality of potatoes wasn't caused by a storm but by

unusually calm waters the calm waters allowed an inordinate amount of plankton

to thrive along the top of the sea water with plankton sucking up all the air

there wasn't much left for the sea potatoes regardless of the cost Martin

wasn't concerned many of these marine seabed species Martin said have real

boom and bust cycles where some years they'll do really well and others not so

well it's all part of the circle of life still he admitted this was a strange

event there does seem to be a lot of them at the moment Martin said

and once again he pointed to the weather a couple of massive storms in the weeks

prior to justice vacation certainly could have caused it one question

remained were these things dangerous just found them a bit scary and the dog

walker threw his into a bin others too feared that they were poisonous and

admittedly there did appear to be something ominous about them but

according to Martin the fears were unwarranted back in the day my daughter

aged about 6 enjoyed digging them up and holding them like a pet and then letting

them burrow home again he said they're not harmful at all well you may not be

able to bake boil mash or stick a sea potato in a stew or really much of

anything else with them seeing hundreds of them washed up on a beach would

indeed be an eyebrow raising experience how would you feel if you saw a beach

littered with seed potatoes this must have been an eerie experience for Jess

and the other beach goers I hope you liked this video if so please hit the

subscribe button and click on the bell icon to make sure you never miss a video

from our Channel

For more infomation >> England Is Buzzing Over Hundreds Of Curious Orbs That Are Washing Up On Beaches Everywhere - Duration: 5:36.

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What Comes After James Webb and WFIRST? Four Amazing Future Space Telescopes - Duration: 14:50.

The Hubble Space Telescope has been in space for 28 years, producing some of the most beautiful

and scientifically important images of the cosmos that humanity has ever taken.

But let's face it, Hubble is getting old, and it probably won't be with us for too

much longer.

NASA's James Webb Space Telescope is in the final stages of testing, and WFIRST is

waiting in the wings.

You'll be glad to know there are even more space telescopes in the works, a set of four

powerful instruments in design right now, which will be part of the next Decadal Survey,

and helping to answer the most fundamental questions about the cosmos.

I know, I know, the James Webb Space Telescope hasn't even reached space yet, and there

could still be more delays as it goes through its current round of tests.

At the time I'm recording this video, it's looking like May 2020, but come on, you know

there'll be delays.

And then there's WFIRST, the wide angle infrared space telescope that's actually

made of an old Hubble class telescope that the National Reconnaissance Office didn't

need any more.

The White House wants to cancel it, Congress saved it, and now NASA is getting parts of

it constructed.

Assuming it doesn't run into more delays, we're looking at a launch in the mid-2020s.

I've actually done an episode about supertelescopes, and talked about James Webb and WFIRST, so

if you want to learn more about those observatories, check that out first.

Today we're going to go further into the future, to look at the next next generation

telescopes.

The ones that could be launched after the telescope that gets launched after the telescope

that comes next.

Before I dig into these missions, I need to talk about the Decadal Survey.

This is a report created by the US National Academy of Sciences for Congress and NASA.

It's essentially a wishlist from scientists to NASA, defining the biggest questions they

have in their field of science.

This allows Congress to assign budgets and NASA to develop mission ideas that will help

fulfill as many of these science goals as possible.

These surveys are done once every decade, bringing together committees in Earth science,

planetary science, and astrophysics.

They pitch ideas, argue, vote and eventually agree on a set of recommendations which will

define science priorities over the next decade.

We're currently in the 2013-2022 Decadal Survey period, so in just a few years, the

next survey will be due, and define the missions from 2023-2032.

I know, that really sounds like the distant future, but time's actually running out

to get the band back together.

If you're interested, I'll put a link to the last Decadal Survey, it's a fascinating

document and you'll get a better sense of how missions come together.

We're still a few years away from the final document, but serious proposals are in the

planning stages for next generation space telescopes, and they are awesome.

Let's talk about them.

The first mission we'll look at is HabEx, or the Habitable Exoplanet Imaging Mission.

This is a spacecraft that will directly photograph planets orbiting other stars.

It'll be targeting all kinds of planets, from hot Jupiters to super Earths, but its

primary target will be to photograph Earth-like exoplanets and measure their atmospheres.

In other words, HabEx is going to try and detect signals of life in planets orbiting

other stars.

In order to get this done, HabEx needs to block the light from the star, so that much

fainter planets nearby can be revealed.

It'll have one and maybe two ways to do this.

The first is using a coronagraph.

This is a tiny dot that sits inside the telescope itself, which is positioned in front of the

star and blocks its light.

The remaining light passing through the telescope comes from fainter objects around the star

and can be imaged by the instrument's sensor.

The telescope has a special deformable mirror that can be tweaked and tuned until the fainter

planets come into view.

Here's an example of a coronagraph in use, on the European Southern Observatory's Very

Large Telescope.

The central star is hidden, revealing the dimmer dust disk around it.

Here's a direct image of a brown dwarf orbiting a star.

And this is one of the most dramatic videos I think I've ever seen, with 4 Jupiter-sized

worlds orbiting around the star HR 8799.

It's a bit of a trick, the researchers animated the motion of the planets in between observations,

but still, wow.

The second method of blocking the light will be to use a Starshade.

This is a completely separate spacecraft that looks like a pinwheel.

It flies tens of thousands of kilometers away from the telescope, and when it's positioned

perfectly, it blocks the light from the central star, while allowing light from the planets

to leak around the edges.

The trick with a Starshade is those petals, which create a softer edge so the light waves

from the fainter planet is less bent.

This creates a very dark shadow that should have the best chance at revealing planets.

Unlike most missions, Starshades like this can be used with any observatory in space.

So, Hubble, James Webb or any other observatory could take advantage of this instrument.

We've always complained about how we can only see a fraction of the planets out there

using the transit or radial velocity method because of how things line up.

But with a mission like HabEx, planets can be seen direction, in any configuration.

In addition to this primary mission, HabEx will also be used for a variety of astrophysics,

like observing the early Universe, and studying the chemicals of the biggest stars before

and after they explode as supernovae.

Next up, Lynx, which will be NASA's next generation X-ray telescope.

Surprisingly, it's not an acronym, it's just named after the animal.

In various cultures Lynxes were thought to have the supernatural ability to see the true

nature of things.

X-rays are at the higher end of the electromagnetic spectrum, and they're blocked by the Earth's

atmosphere, so you need a space telescope to be able to see them.

Right now, NASA has its Chandra X-ray Observatory, and ESA is working on its ATHENA mission,

due for launch in 2028.

Lynx will act as a partner to the James Webb Space Telescope, peering out to the edge of

the observable Universe, revealing the first generations of supermassive black holes, and

helping to chart their formation and mergers over time.

It'll see radiation coming from the hot gas from the early cosmic web, as the first

galaxies were coming together.

And then it'll be used to examine the kinds of objects Chandra, XMM Newton and other X-ray

observatories focus on: pulsars, galaxy collisions, collapsars, supernovae, black holes, and more.

Even normal stars can give off X-ray flares that tell us more about them.

The vast majority of the Universe's matter is located in clouds of gas as hot as a million

Kelvin.

If you want to see the Universe as it truly is, you want to look at it in X-rays.

X-ray telescopes are different from visible light observatories like Hubble.

You can't just have a mirror that bounces X-rays.

Instead, you use grazing-incidence mirrors which can slightly redirect photons that hit

them, funneling them down to a detector.

With a 3 meter outer mirror, the starting part of the funnel, it'll provide 50-100

times the sensitivity with 16 times the field of view, gathering photons at 800 times the

speed of Chandra.

I'm not sure what else to say.

It'll be a monster X-ray observatory.

Trust me, astronomers think this is a very good idea.

Next, the Origins Space Telescope or OST.

Like James Webb, and the Spitzer Space Telescope, OST is going to be an infrared telescope,

designed to observe some of the coolest objects in the Universe.

But it's going to be even bigger.

While James Webb has a primary mirror 6.5 meters across, the OST mirror will be 9.1

meters across.

Imagine a telescope almost as big as the largest ground telescopes on Earth, but out in space.

In space.

It won't just be big, it'll be cold.

NASA was able to cool down Spitzer to just 5 Kelvin - that's 5 degrees above absolute

zero, and just a little warmer than the background temperature of the Universe.

They're planning to get Origins down to 4 Kelvin.

It doesn't sound like much, but it's a huge engineering challenge.

Instead of just cooling the spacecraft with liquid helium like they did with Spitzer,

they'll need to take the heat out in stages, with reflectors, radiators, and finally a

cryocooler around the instruments themselves.

With a huge, cold infrared telescope, Origins will push beyond James Webb's view of the

formation of the first galaxies.

It'll look to the era when the first stars were forming, a time that astronomers call

the Dark Ages.

It'll see the formation of planetary systems, dust disks and directly observe the atmospheres

of other planets looking for biosignatures, evidence of life out there.

Three exciting missions, that'll push our knowledge of the Universe forward.

But I've saved the biggest, most ambitious telescope for last.

And we'll talk about that in a second, but first I'd like to thank:

The Amazing Thunderchild Bryan Alvarez

Grant Lanning Thomas Wippich

Torben Frylund Eric M

And the rest of our 823 patrons for their generous support.

If you love what we're doing and want to get in on the action, head over to patreon.com/universetoday.

All right, I've saved the best for last: LUVOIR, or the Large UV/Optical/IR Surveyor.

James Webb is going to be a powerful telescope, but it's an infrared instrument designed

to look at cooler objects in the Universe, like red-shifted galaxies at the beginning

of time, or newly forming planetary systems.

The Origins Space Telescope will be a better version of James Webb.

LUVOIR will be the true successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.

It'll be a huge instrument capable of seeing in infrared, visible light and ultraviolet.

There are two designs in the works.

One which is 8-meters across and could launch on a heavy-lift vehicle like the Falcon Heavy.

And another design that would use the Space Launch System that measures 15-meters across.

That's 50% bigger than the biggest Earth-based telescope.

Remember, Hubble is only 2.6 meters.

It'll have a wide field of view and a suite of filters and instruments that astronomers

can use to observe whatever they want.

It'll be equipped with a coronograph like we talked about earlier, to directly observe

planets and obscure their stars, a spectrograph to figure out what chemicals are present in

exoplanet atmospheres, and more.

LUVOIR will be a general purpose instrument, which astronomers will use to make discoveries

across the fields of astrophysics and planetary science.

But some of its capabilities will include: directly observing exoplanets and searching

for biosignatures, categorizing all the different kinds of exoplanets out there, from hot Jupiters

to super Earths.

It'll be able to observe objects within the Solar System better than anything else

- if we don't have a spacecraft there, LUVOIR will be a pretty good view.

For example, here's a view of Enceladus from Hubble, compared to the view from LUVOIR.

It will be able to look out anywhere in the Universe, to see much smaller structures than

Hubble.

It'll see the first galaxies, first stars, and help measure the concentrations of dark

matter across the Universe.

Astronomers still don't fully understand what happens when stars gather enough mass

to ignite.

LUVOIR will look into star forming regions, peer through the gas and dust and see the

earliest moments of star formation as well as the planets orbiting them.

Have I got you totally and completely excited about the future of astronomy?

Good.

But here's comes the bad news.

There's almost no chance reality will match this fantasy.

Earlier this month NASA announced that mission planners working on these space telescopes

will need to limit their budgets to between three and five billion dollars.

Until now, planners didn't have any guidelines, they were to just design instruments that

could get the science done.

Engineers had been working on mission plans that could easily cross $5 billion for HabEx,

Lynx and OST, and were considering a much larger $20 billion for LUVOIR.

Even though Congress has been pushing for surprisingly big budgets for NASA, the space

agency wants its planners to be conservative.

And when you consider just how over budget and late James Webb has become, it's not

entirely surprising.

James Webb was originally supposed to cost between one and three point five billion dollars

and launch between 2007 and 2011.

Now it looks like 2020 for a launch, the costs have broken past a Congress mandated $8.8

billion budget, and it's clear there's still a lot of work to be done.

In a recent shake test, engineers found washers and screws that had shaken out of the telescope.

This isn't like an IKEA shelf with leftover parts.

These pieces are important.

Even though it's been saved from the chopping block, the WFIRST Telescope is estimated to

be $3.9 billion, up from its original $2 billion budget.

One, two or maybe even all of these telescopes will eventually get built.

This is what the scientists think are most important to make the next discoveries in

astronomy, but get ready for budget battles, cost overruns and stretching timelines.

We'll know better when all the studies come together in 2019.

It would take some kind of engineering miracle to have all four telescopes come together,

on time and on budget, to blast to space together in 2035.

I'll keep you updated.

What do you think?

Which of these telescopes is most exciting to you?

Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

Once a week I gather up all my space news into a single email newsletter and send it

out.

It's got pictures, brief highlights about the story, and links so you can find out more.

Go to universetoday.com/newsletter to sign up.

All of my videos are also available in handy audio and video podcast formats so you can

have our latest episodes show up right on your audio device.

Go to universetoday.com/audio or universetoday.com/video to get the one you want.

And I'll put the links in the shownotes.

And finally, here's a playlist.

For more infomation >> What Comes After James Webb and WFIRST? Four Amazing Future Space Telescopes - Duration: 14:50.

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12 VIDEO GAMES BANNED AROUND THE WORLD | Los 12 Mas - Duration: 9:52.

For more infomation >> 12 VIDEO GAMES BANNED AROUND THE WORLD | Los 12 Mas - Duration: 9:52.

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Noticias Telemundo, 12 de junio de 2018 | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 21:50.

For more infomation >> Noticias Telemundo, 12 de junio de 2018 | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 21:50.

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BEST FAST KODI BUILD FOR JUNE 2018 🔥 KODI 17.6 BUILD 🔥 PROTOCULTURE BUILD KODI 🔥 FROM REAPER WIZARD - Duration: 16:18.

What's up guys it's Everything Kodi back with another video

so many of you are looking for a build with lot of different add-ons

and lot of different sources for content then you might want to check the PROTOCULTURE BUILD

I've also tested on my fire TV and two other fire sticks the build works great

You will enjoy this kodi build on your amazon fire stick or nvidia shield or android tv box

now I'm gonna give you guys an overview of what it has to offer

offer if you like it I can show you how you can get it installed on your device.

Now if you haven't already go ahead and hit the subscribe button

and make sure you click the little bell icon right next to subscribe so you don't miss any of my posts

so let's go ahead and jump into the overview of the build.

Now once you install it the first section you're gonna run into is the movies section

so you have the widget here at the top

you can scroll through find a movie and tv shows you like.

Don't forget to subscribe and click the bell icon to stay informed.

For more infomation >> BEST FAST KODI BUILD FOR JUNE 2018 🔥 KODI 17.6 BUILD 🔥 PROTOCULTURE BUILD KODI 🔥 FROM REAPER WIZARD - Duration: 16:18.

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¿Luis Miguel es el padre del hijo de Lucía Méndez? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:41.

For more infomation >> ¿Luis Miguel es el padre del hijo de Lucía Méndez? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:41.

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Judge clears AT&T to purchase Time Warner, creating entertainment colossus - Duration: 5:46.

A federal judge Tuesday cleared the way for AT&T Inc.'s $85.4-billion purchase of Time Warner Inc

, creating an entertainment colossus that promises to reshape the media business.  The ruling by U

S. District Judge Richard Leon in the biggest antitrust case of the century could pave the way for more mega-mergers and was a blow to the Trump administration

Advertisement  President Trump had said during the 2016 campaign that the tie-up would concentrate too much media power in one company, and his long-running feud with Time Warner's CNN politicized the case

The Justice Department filed an antitrust suit late last year to block the deal and Leon denied AT&T's request to try to uncover any evidence the White House might have influenced the decision

 A no-nonsense veteran judge appointed to the bench in 2002 by Republican President George W

Bush, Leon sided with AT&T and Time Warner after a six-week trial in a Washington courtroom

 AT&T, already a telecommunications giant with more than 100 million wireless subscribers and 25 million pay TV homes, will acquire Time Warner's valuable entertainment assets, including HBO, CNN, Cartoon Network, TBS, TNT, Turner Classic Movies and Warner Bros

, Hollywood's largest TV and movie studio.  During the trial, Justice Department lawyers argued that AT&T wanted to "weaponize" Time Warner's content to give it leverage to raise customer prices

 The result, the government warned, would be significant harm to competition — particularly new online pay TV providers — and a powerful new gatekeeper company that would lead to an increase of more than $400 million a year in prices for all Americans

 But AT&T's legal team, led by high-powered Los Angeles attorney Daniel Petrocelli, pursued an aggressive defense that included testimony from AT&T Chief Executive Randall Stephenson and Time Warner CEO Jeffrey Bewkes

 They argued that the merger was needed so the companies could better battle online competitors such as Netflix, Amazon, Facebook and Google

The combination of Time Warner's "premium content" with AT&T's vast subscriber network would allow the new company to engage consumers and target advertising tailored to their habits

 Prices would go down, not up, AT&T said.  The judge's ruling has been highly anticipated

 In an extraordinary move, Leon did not post his decision online. He delivered it from the bench at 4 p

m. EDT, after U.S. financial markets had closed. Spectators were not allowed to leave the courtroom until Leon finished

 Professional line-standers, who are paid by attorneys, corporate executives and hedge-fund managers to hold a place in the courtroom line, began queuing up outside the courthouse on Monday afternoon — nearly 24 hours in advance

 About 50 spent the night on the street outside before being let in to the building at 7 a

m. Reporters began arriving about 7 a.m. to secure spots among the 30 seats in the courtroom reserved for members of the media

 The case took on political overtones because of Trump's campaign comments and his continued labeling of CNN as "fake news

"  "As an example of the power structure I'm fighting, AT&T is buying Time Warner, and thus CNN, a deal we will not approve in my administration because it's too much concentration of power in the hands of too few," Trump told an Oct

22, 2016, campaign crowd, which responded with applause. Advertisement  The antitrust case was unusual because it dealt with a vertical merger, meaning the two companies do not directly compete in their primary businesses

 Such deals are different from horizontal mergers, which involve companies that compete directly

Those mergers remove competitors from the marketplace and are more frequently blocked

 The last time the Justice Department successfully blocked a vertical merger was nearly 50 years ago

 Leon issued the ruling Tuesday to give time for the losing side come up with a strategy, including perhaps pursue a stay of the decision before the June 21 deadline the companies set to complete the deal

 Special correspondent Eliza Fawcett contributed to this report.

For more infomation >> Judge clears AT&T to purchase Time Warner, creating entertainment colossus - Duration: 5:46.

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Painful Illustrations That Reveal The Harsh Reality Of The World - Ep. #1 - Duration: 10:54.

Painful Illustrations Series - Episode #1

For more infomation >> Painful Illustrations That Reveal The Harsh Reality Of The World - Ep. #1 - Duration: 10:54.

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Ana de la Reguera, la nueva personaje en 'Goliath' | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 1:47.

For more infomation >> Ana de la Reguera, la nueva personaje en 'Goliath' | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 1:47.

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Ariana Grande se compromete a matrimonio con Pete Davidson | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:28.

For more infomation >> Ariana Grande se compromete a matrimonio con Pete Davidson | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:28.

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MOTHER'S DAY BRACELET - Duration: 11:19.

hello hi everyone my name is Nati

Welcome to my channel NATIBEADS in

this new tutorial I will show you how

make this beautiful and elegant bracelet to

I play with the necklace that I made in the video

previous to give to mom in

Mother's day is made with the

Same material that I used on the necklace

rondelle, silver seed beads

and seed beads in cobalt blue color

the claps I used a magnetic claps

you see

I think it's very comfortable to put it

and remove it look I put it so you see

how is the truth that is precious not

all a beautiful and the rondelle

it's a beautiful faceted crystal too

you're going to need some rings of about 5

millimeters in diameter a needle

of number 10 the rondelle

it,s blu by 8 milimeters

cobalt seed beads are

Preciosa Czech glass 11/0 in color

silver and cobalt blue

scissors

the thread that I always use is

this brand fireline to

jewellery and jewelry this is from

0,15 mm and pliers good

as always right below the video

where it says show more click here and you

a drop down with all the

video information the material that

used my social networks and my

channel videos in Spansh and we started

with the good tutorial I'll start

I have the needle threaded as always

with a meter and a half of yarn and look

let's do the next one

We lined 2 cobalt blue seed beads 4

silver seed beads

2 cobalt one rondelle 2 cobalt and four

silver

this is the sequence 2 cobalt 4 silver 2

cobalt a rondelle 2 cobalt and 4 of

silver we carry here at the end of the thread and

look what we are going to put in this position

and for the first one I've put that is

It is cobalt blue end we put

the needle

we pull the thread

and so we would stay as you see is very

easy once here I will pull gently

of the thread to shorten it and we do three knots

good so I would stay and see now

I am in this blue seed bead and

I'm going to move on at three

following silver color you see

and we lined up a silver one rondelle

and four silver seed beads

and we are here at the end of the thread

and look let's leave the four of

silver color and we will go back for the

rondelle and the next silver

we pull the thread

and so I would have stayed

for these three at the beginning so now

we went through the next silver

and for the cobalt blue color

good you see but I'm going to turn it because

I have to stay in

this position this would be the

beginning of the bracelet and here would go a

ring to put the claps is good

Well now what we have to do is

go through again all the

beads

once I've gone through all

the beads look I'm going to go out to this

first cobalt blue color to this

seed bead

and now looking is very easy

next sequence is

cobalt blue seed bead rondelle 2

cobalt blue and 4 silver seed beads

We are here at the end of the thread

and look let's put the needle through the

first cobalt blue color you see from

these two for the first

we pull the thread and so I would stay

we repeat again a blue seed bead

cobalt rondelle 2 seed beads

cobalt blue and 4 silver seed beads

and we take the end of the thread and

we put the needle for the first

cobalt blue seed bead

for the first seed and well what

you see that it's super easy to do this

is what we have to do until the

end 105 00:06:13,439 --> 00:06:19,860 we lined seed bead rondelle two seeds

cobalt blue color and four

silver seed beads

you see is going to look beautiful and at the same

Super easy the time to make

this can

any because it's for beginners

well, this is what you have to

have this sequence repeated all the time

until you have the contour length

of your wrist less the claps

you can see I've finished it

and I'm going to do the last sequence

that is, a cobalt blue color rondelle

2 cobalt blue and 4 silver

we take to the end of the thread

and we would go for the first color

cobalt blue that is this

and we adjust

well the thread and good is very

important that when you finish look at the

first one that I have put is in the

downstairs

and the one that ended is in the part of

above you realize this is very

important for you to have the

balanced bracelet and I have finished in

is cobalt blue and I'm going to go to

three following silver

you see

we pull the thread

and we are going to do the same

what we have done in this other end

and we lined up a silver seed

bead a rondelle and four seed beads of

silver color

We take the end of the thread we leave the

seed beads and we return by the rondelle and by the

next silver seed bead

Well, you see, it's exactly

same in one extreme and in the other and now

I've gone through these three at the beginning

now I continue going through the

next silver and for both

following cobalt blue

and now what we have to do is

go back again

for the beads so that this fits me

as hard as possible once I've

passed again for all

Beads I have come out to this seed bead of

cobalt blue and here as always

We put the needle between two beads

makes us the tie we put the needle

and we throw and repeat one more time

we go to the next rondelle to the

next cobalt blue seed bead

and we repeat the same thing we put the needle

between two beads the tie is made

we put the needle by him and throw

we repeat again

and look for example we put in this

blue seed by the following

seed beads

we go through some of the beads

always always in the same direction

that's very, very, very

important

and for example here simply

we cut the thread

and we would have finished it well

we only have to put the magnetic

claps has a magnet

quite strong is a little

difficult to open you see

well we take a ring we open

We put one end of the bracelet

by one of the rings of the claps

and we close

and on the other side the same thing we take the

ring

we open

We put in the other end of the bracelet

by the other ring of the claps

and we close

Well, you can see the result that

bracelet so beautiful and super super

elegant to give mom good

nothing more for today's video I hope that

I liked you I hope your

comments finger up that you subscribe

to my channel NATIBEADS a kiss to all

thanks for watching me and until next time

video goodbye

For more infomation >> MOTHER'S DAY BRACELET - Duration: 11:19.

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¿Sherlyn estará de romance con Kuno Becker? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:35.

For more infomation >> ¿Sherlyn estará de romance con Kuno Becker? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:35.

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Vets Speechless After What They Caught Trump's Navy SEAL Secretary Doing At Their Sacred Ground - Duration: 5:04.

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Greg Rutherford announces decision to retire - Sport News - Duration: 1:59.

 Greg Rutherford, Britain's Olympic long jump champion, has announced his decision to retire this summer

 Rutherford, who took gold at the 2012 Olympics in London, before following up with bronze in Brazil in 2016, will step away from elite competition due to injury

 Rutherford said in an Instagram post: "I'm incredibly proud of my career. I've achieved so much but retirement comes early to those of us for whom sport is a livelihood

 "It only feels like yesterday I was winning my first major medal but now 12 years on, I sit here as the greatest long jumper Great Britain has ever had, one of the most successful in European history and someone ready to hang the spikes up for good

 "I'm going to go for the European Championships one final time. And then I'll also be jumping in Birmingham and London for the Diamond Leagues

 "Thank you for all your love and support over the years."  Rutherford, 31, hopes to compete at the European Championships in Berlin in August, before ending his 13-year career

  "At times I am in so much pain I can't even sit on the floor and play with my two kids," Rutherford told The Guardian

 "I still feel I am fast. I still feel as if I am super strong. But whenever I try to sprint or jump I have to take three days off because I am limping so much

In the end it wears you down."  Rutherford claimed his Olympic gold on 'Super Saturday' as he became the first British man to win long jump gold since Lynn Davies in 1964

 Rutherford is also a two-time Commonwealth Games medallist, taking silver in 2010 and gold in 2014

 He won gold at the 2015 World Championships and 2016 European Championships also

For more infomation >> Greg Rutherford announces decision to retire - Sport News - Duration: 1:59.

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Benicio del Toro reacciona a críticas de 'Sicario' | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:46.

For more infomation >> Benicio del Toro reacciona a críticas de 'Sicario' | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:46.

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Dictan sentencia a Iñakia Urdangarin | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:33.

For more infomation >> Dictan sentencia a Iñakia Urdangarin | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 0:33.

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¿Existe relación entre Lupillo Rivera y su fan? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 1:49.

For more infomation >> ¿Existe relación entre Lupillo Rivera y su fan? | Suelta La Sopa | Entretenimiento - Duration: 1:49.

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العاطفة الزوجية ◆ اعتبر يوم الأسرة يوم مقدس ◆ محاضرة مفيدة للدكتور حمود فهد القشعان - Duration: 12:08.

For more infomation >> العاطفة الزوجية ◆ اعتبر يوم الأسرة يوم مقدس ◆ محاضرة مفيدة للدكتور حمود فهد القشعان - Duration: 12:08.

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Ramadan Special | Sahari O Ramadan | Episode 26 | 2018 [Re-upload] - Duration: 22:21.

AK Computer Network

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