Product Description
Product Discription:
Material: glass; Color: clear white
Pakage incliding:
1.5 mm (500 pieces)
2.5 mm (400 pieces)
3 mm (300 pieces)
4 mm (300 pieces)
5 mm (300 pieces
Product Usage: It is fit for decorate your phone, tablet, card crafting, wallet, clothes, shoes, table scatter decorations or wedding stationary
Customer Service:
If you have any problem for our product, you can click the “seller contact” button in your Amazon account to email us. we are happly to help you and reply as soon as we can
Price: $7.99
- Material: glass; Color: clear white
- Pakage includes: 1.5 mm (500 pieces); 2.5 mm (400 pieces); 3 mm (300 pieces); 4 mm (300 pieces); 5 mm (300 pieces)
- It is fit for decorate your phone, tablet, card crafting, wallet, clothes, shoes, table scatter decorations or wedding stationary
- With them for DIY projects, craft Ideas etc
- AFTER SALE MAINTENANCE AND CUSTOMER SERVICE: Our company provide 24 months warranty service.So feel free to contact us if you have any question








2017 – Road Trip – Calgary – Inglewood’s White Barn
One final Calgary shot and then we head to Cranbrook BC.
This old barn is a relic from bygone days and is on 14th St off 9th Ave in Inglewood district. No idea why the wedding party was standing outside the barn.
THE WHITE BARN:
The structure on 14th Street and 9th Avenue is a significant piece of Calgary’s history.
Built in 1909 by James A. Stewart, one of the proprietors of the Grand Livery Stable, the two-storey, gambrel-roofed barn originally housed the horses of travellers and out-of-towners arriving in Calgary.
Often referred to as simply the white barn, it is one of the few remaining examples of the “Ontario Barn” style popular in the 19th century, and one of the last examples of a livery stable in the city.
Since the decline of equine transportation, the barn has been primarily used for storage, most notably housing a motorized fleet of mail trucks in the 1940s.
After changing hands a number of times, George E. Cinnamon purchased the barn in 1976. He owned it long enough that it became informally known as the Cinnamon barn.
After being interested in the space for several years, Calgary lawyer Corinna Lee purchased the Barn from the late Cinnamon’s estate in 2005.
Lee says she has a few ideas for what she might want to do with it, but nothing concrete as of yet. “At one point I was thinking of converting it to commercial use,” she says. “But once you convert to commercial use, everything gets more expensive, so cost is the main factor.”
By Ted’s photos – Returns 11 Aug 18 on 2017-06-24 15:19:25