Beek2002



I removed my vacuum lines not long ago when pulling my engine and mistakenly did not note which line went where...too much alcohol I suppose. Anyway, there are three barbs on the reservoir can---one in the middle that's sealed and obviously not used, and then one on each side of the middle that are used. My factory vacuum lines have long since been replaced so now I have black rubber lines. I am wondering if it matters which side of the reservoir can gets the "black line" in the vacuum diagram and which side gets the "red line".

Oh and I just remembered another question too: The main vacuum tree on the intake has four barbed pipes coming off plus the middle line where the hose from the brake booster attaches. Two of the four pipes are larger than the other two and one of them is to be capped off. Which component on the engine uses vacuum from the remaining larger barbed pipe ?

Ford F 150 Questions - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

Yes, it matters. With the engine idling, connect the Red line to one of the nipples. If the idle drops slightly & you hear no hissing, it's on the wrong one. If the idle is steady, and you can feel vacuum at the other nipple, it's on the correct one. Put the black line on the other nipple.

Vacuum Line Routing

This is related to fosgate3's post. I have a 1995 F150 4.9L. The "coffee can" (vacuum reservoir?) on the passenger side fender well is rusted through. Does anyone know if there is an aftermarket replacement (plastic maybe) available? Can anyone explain the reservoir's function?

The vacuum canister is a part available aftermarket. The canister feeds the EGR and AIR solenoids, the canister provides a small amount of vacuum storage as the items fed from the canister need consistent vacuum to operate properly. The vacuum of the engine varies with rpm and load.i have been looking for the vacuum diagram for a non high output 5.0 with speed density. it came out of a 1989 Lincoln town car but anything i find leads me to dead end websites with no more information or pictures... mostly ford fuel injection.

Ive removed the tab and tad solenoids, looking to hook up everything else EGR charcoal canister and so on. but as of now most of the lines aren't connected anymore. any help is greatly appreciated.

Vacuum Diagram 5.0 - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

Vacuum Line Mystery

I don't have a diagram for you, but I can help you out, I bought an 85 f150 a while back and it had an 86 302 and all the vacuum lines were missing except the one for the brake booster. Can you post some pictures of your engine and any vacuum ports you can find?

It's for a Fox Body Mustang, but it should work. Just google 1987 Mustang, and you'll find a ton of relevant info.

Vacuum Line?? - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

Btfordguy if you wouldn't mind sending me some pictures that would be awesome. Mainly where the tree plugs up on the manifold for vacuum And the egr regulator. Found out my smog pump is broken so there's a good chance I'll get a pilot for that

F150 5.8 High Idle... And I've Replaced Everything! Please Help!

It gives a basic description, and no its early efi with speed density. im also trying to figure out how the coolant lines connect to the throttle body. trying to find some pictures to push me in the right direction.

EGR Vacuum Hose Routing - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

THE MAIN LINEs I'm the tying to hook up are in The pictures. I have 2 lines and three uncovered plugs coming from the back of the intake manifold as well as that port behind the manifold I believe on the head.

Ok, well to connect your vacuum lines understand this. Theres ported, and manifold vacuum. Ported, which yours may not even have being fi, is vacuum only when your throttle plates are opened. Manifold is a constant vacuum. So you can pretty much customize how you run your lines if you know what requires what. You don't have to use every port either, if you have an empty one, cap it off. I'm not sure what your egr requires, but Google can be your friend! Oh and seeing where those ports are located? Those are deffinitly manifold vacuum sources.

L Vacuum Help - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

S3 L Jet Vacuum Diagram

It gives a basic description, and no its early efi with speed density. im also trying to figure out how the coolant lines connect to the throttle body. trying to find some pictures to push me in the right direction.

EGR Vacuum Hose Routing - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

THE MAIN LINEs I'm the tying to hook up are in The pictures. I have 2 lines and three uncovered plugs coming from the back of the intake manifold as well as that port behind the manifold I believe on the head.

Ok, well to connect your vacuum lines understand this. Theres ported, and manifold vacuum. Ported, which yours may not even have being fi, is vacuum only when your throttle plates are opened. Manifold is a constant vacuum. So you can pretty much customize how you run your lines if you know what requires what. You don't have to use every port either, if you have an empty one, cap it off. I'm not sure what your egr requires, but Google can be your friend! Oh and seeing where those ports are located? Those are deffinitly manifold vacuum sources.

L Vacuum Help - 1995 Ford F150 5 0 Vacuum Line Diagram

S3 L Jet Vacuum Diagram

1995 ford f150 5.0 vacuum line diagram. There are any 1995 ford f150 5.0 vacuum line diagram in here.

I made you a present to celebrate it being almost a year since I started sharing my work online and as a thank you for all the amazing support, emails, reviews, and general loveliness I’ve had coming my way since taking the (at the time) very scary step of putting my work out there.  I was going to share this at Christmas but the fantastic Mr Finch beat me to it with his amazing fox paper doll, so I thought I’d hang back a bit.

OK, so you can print out these two pages on normal printer paper but I would recommend something slightly thicker.  I printed mine out on medium weight cartridge paper.  You can also print it out on paper and then glue the whole thing onto card before cutting it out.  The first page has a basic doll’s body and the second page has three alternative faces and shoes that you can cut out and glue on top of the basic body.

Paper Doll Presents - Paper Doll Art

Then it’s over to you!  You can draw, paint, colour, dye, dab with tea bags to make her look a bit antique-ish, whatever you like.  I’ve doodled on mine with a fine line pen.  It’s a lot easier to draw and colour the doll

Maki Hino |paper Doll

Cut out the individual pieces with scissors or a craft knife the join the pieces together at the little crosses with paper fasteners or tie them together the way I have with thread or yarn.  I’ve used a combination of both.

I really hope you like it!  It’s actually kind of exciting and a bit daunting to put something out there for other people to take in their own direction and I would love to see what you come up with, so please feel free to share your paper doll photos on my Facebook page or email them to me at @gmail.com

PS  Please don’t sell this, publish it as your own work, use it to make things to sell, adapt it to sell it, use it in any sort of dark magic type rituals or generally profit from this in any way that is just plain shabby or unpleasant.  Instead make it, play with it, frame it, give it to people you love and enjoy it.Linda Edkins Wyatt is popping in from the Artist Tribe today with a fabulous project... she's made a gorgeous and totally unique set of mixed media art paper dolls!

From The Artist Tribe - Paper Doll Art

History Of Paper Dolls And Popular Culture

Linda used several different colors of embossing powder to add texture and a bit of shine to the details of her dolls. If you look closely, you'll also see bits of Dresden trim and some embellished sari scraps! Make sure you stop by her blog to see close-ups of each of the art dolls and get more details on the project and products she used.

Also, just a quick reminder that I'm celebrating the one year anniversary of my shop with a sale! Get 15% off all mixed media supplies and downloadable products with the coupon 1stAnniversary15.

Paper Doll - Paper Doll Art

Five New Stencil Designs! I'm super excited to share that I have five new stencil designs releasing today from StencilGirl! I'm really excited about these stencils - it's a bit of a mixed bag and in the past I've always released in collections, but each one is a design that I really loved and so I decided to just put them all out there together in a bit of an eclectic mix. Without further ado... here they are! (You can tell that mine are already getting plenty of use :) Do these designs look familiar at all? If you follow me on Instagram you...

Dress Up Friends: Printable Paper Doll Girls

Mixed Media Texture with Baked Texture Embossing Powder If you're looking for the original post with more photos and a tutorial for this piece, it has moved to my website. You can get the entire post / tutorial on my website, or check out any of my mixed media tutorials. If you missed them, you can still check out these four posts from the week our our Baked Texture blog hop, each with lots of amazing inspiration and fun techniques for you to try: Mary Beth Shaw Becca Feeken Tammy Tutterow Debi AdamsEighteenth-century iterations of paper dolls — hand-painted figures marketed to wealthy Europeans — were nearly as rarefied as the real-life versions of the towering headdresses and ruffled gowns they wore. By the next century, advancements in printing technologies allowed for paper dolls to go mainstream as toys for children. And while these toys reinforced often limited notions of what a person (usually a woman) ought to be, they also acknowledged the multiplicity of selves that live within us all, and provided an affordable way for children to use fashion to experiment and escape (paper dolls were especially popular during the Great Depression). Today, too, fantasies of slipping into a new self or world are deeply appealing. There may not be much cause to shop or dress up yourself, but who knows where a doll might need to go, or who they might need to see.

 - Paper Doll Art

A few weeks ago, T asked a handful of illustrators, artists and designers to dream up paper-doll outfits of their own — for figures created by Ilya Milstein — and the results feel anything but predictable. Some of the looks would be at home at an avant-garde runway presentation (and you may find that some of the pieces, especially the more conceptual ones, require a bit of tape). The designer Katie Stout, for instance, was drawn to the bulbous shapes of produce, like carrots and Ugli fruit. Other participants offered casual pieces, like patterned separates or a floral dress, for sunny spring days. Having spent much of his period of self-isolation watching old Hollywood movies, the tattoo artist Mars Hobrecker went for full glamour, fashioning a gown with ruffles inspired by the costumes of Edith Head.

Paulina Olowska, an artist based in Rabka, Poland, nodded to a more immediate past, drawing on human-size clothing items she and her partner have picked up on their various travels: a straw hat from Lamu, Kenya; a black linen vest from Fez, Morocco. The fashion designer Aurora James, meanwhile, looked closer to home — and to our current moment: “I’ve been swaddling myself in sheets and blankets and walking around like that, ” she said. The architects Adam Charlap Hyman and Andre Herrero of Charlap Hyman & Herrero also created outfits that resonate with today’s world: Their reflective chrome suits are complete with plant headpieces that seem to assert, hopefully, that life goes on.

Paper Dolls! — The Art Project - Paper Doll Art

Paper Dolls! — The Art Project

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section ST, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: Home Crafts; Playing Dress Up. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

Mixed Media Texture with Baked Texture Embossing Powder If you're looking for the original post with more photos and a tutorial for this piece, it has moved to my website. You can get the entire post / tutorial on my website, or check out any of my mixed media tutorials. If you missed them, you can still check out these four posts from the week our our Baked Texture blog hop, each with lots of amazing inspiration and fun techniques for you to try: Mary Beth Shaw Becca Feeken Tammy Tutterow Debi AdamsEighteenth-century iterations of paper dolls — hand-painted figures marketed to wealthy Europeans — were nearly as rarefied as the real-life versions of the towering headdresses and ruffled gowns they wore. By the next century, advancements in printing technologies allowed for paper dolls to go mainstream as toys for children. And while these toys reinforced often limited notions of what a person (usually a woman) ought to be, they also acknowledged the multiplicity of selves that live within us all, and provided an affordable way for children to use fashion to experiment and escape (paper dolls were especially popular during the Great Depression). Today, too, fantasies of slipping into a new self or world are deeply appealing. There may not be much cause to shop or dress up yourself, but who knows where a doll might need to go, or who they might need to see.

 - Paper Doll Art

A few weeks ago, T asked a handful of illustrators, artists and designers to dream up paper-doll outfits of their own — for figures created by Ilya Milstein — and the results feel anything but predictable. Some of the looks would be at home at an avant-garde runway presentation (and you may find that some of the pieces, especially the more conceptual ones, require a bit of tape). The designer Katie Stout, for instance, was drawn to the bulbous shapes of produce, like carrots and Ugli fruit. Other participants offered casual pieces, like patterned separates or a floral dress, for sunny spring days. Having spent much of his period of self-isolation watching old Hollywood movies, the tattoo artist Mars Hobrecker went for full glamour, fashioning a gown with ruffles inspired by the costumes of Edith Head.

Paulina Olowska, an artist based in Rabka, Poland, nodded to a more immediate past, drawing on human-size clothing items she and her partner have picked up on their various travels: a straw hat from Lamu, Kenya; a black linen vest from Fez, Morocco. The fashion designer Aurora James, meanwhile, looked closer to home — and to our current moment: “I’ve been swaddling myself in sheets and blankets and walking around like that, ” she said. The architects Adam Charlap Hyman and Andre Herrero of Charlap Hyman & Herrero also created outfits that resonate with today’s world: Their reflective chrome suits are complete with plant headpieces that seem to assert, hopefully, that life goes on.

Paper Dolls! — The Art Project - Paper Doll Art

Paper Dolls! — The Art Project

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section ST, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: Home Crafts; Playing Dress Up. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

paper doll art. There are any paper doll art in here.