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Ribbon is a super bulky weight cotton and polyester blend ribbon yarn. It is perfect for creating structured home dcor and accessory projects, from bags and baskets to rugs and wall hangings. Ribbon is also a great option for all types of macram projects
Are you looking for the perfect ribbon to create hair accessories, hair bow supplies for cheerleading events, or a special scrapbooking project? Ribbon and Bows Oh My! is the ultimate destination for wholesale ribbon and specialty craft materials. Our signature prints and themed ribbon are some of the finest grosgrain you will find anywhere. Our ribbonistas have more than two decades of experience as a family-owned and operated business. We are proud to be one of the leading distributors of seasonal ribbon, craft hardware, ribbon for hair bows for sale, trims, and cheer accessories. When you choose us as your go-to ribbon source, you will receive service and an experience unlike any other. Explore our exceptional selection of DIY supplies today so you can craft to your heart's desire.
As the main destination for ribbon and bow accessories, RABOM will always have a rich diversity of inspirations to get your creative juices flowing. We proudly offer more than 250 unique prints, paying special attention to consistency and quality. Our selection of hair bow supplies offers every fastener, accessory, and embellishment imaginable. Find hair bow bling, barrettes, epoxy dots, headbands, webbing, our signature clips, and many other hair accessories so you can create exclusive designs for everyday wear or special occasions.
Craft the most spirited bows for upcoming cheer events, competitions, or football games when you discover our selection of cheer hair bows for sale. We offer a wide selection of ribbon, elastics, and decorations that will hold up whether you are tossed into a pike basket or bending into a scorpion pose. Best of all, RABOM is committed to providing attentive service long after your purchase. We offer DIY support in the form of tips and tutorials for adorable bows, ribbon sculptures, home dcor, holiday decorations, dog collars, and so much more.
Ribbons are not simply our specialty; they are our passion. When you need the perfect ribbon for your new craft project or DIY gifts, we are the reliable source for wholesale ribbon at marvelous prices. Explore our inventory today to be dazzled and enthralled. If you have any questions, you may contact us during our regular business hours by phone or email.
I hovered my mouse over a command icon in the ribbon. Finger slipped and I see the RMB menu, with the 'hide command label" in the middle of the pop-up menu. Seeing it was a little vague, I clicked the line. Oh! Neat!! Command line text dissapeared, as i thougth it would (I just have the icon, the picture) . So, I hover ove rhte icon and RMB again, thinking I will get an 'Unhide' option. But no. It now says somethign to the effect of 'hide all labels in group'. Ok, I think, maybe I need to cycle thru the options to get an 'unhide option (thinking I will get hide one, hide all, unhide). But no.
So, I have a group with their labels hidden. And the 'hide command label' is greyed out, and I can see the box is checked. Other commands have the option to hide their command lables, but I dare try it again for fear of soon haveing just a ribbon little icon / pictures.
OK, just palyed with it a little more , thinking (as I've come to expect from Pro E) it's some weird placement or some weird combination of clickes & such. If I hover over the group title bar at the bottom of the ribbon (the group label) I can 'unhide all labels in group'!! And it works!!! (But why have it on one instance, but not another.. wierd.) But, sadly, the original Icon I hid the label is still hidden. Oh, no, wait, If I hover my mouse over the actual icon (not the 'defined button area', but the icon) I can get it back..
In computer interface design, a ribbon is a graphical control element in the form of a set of toolbars placed on several tabs. The typical structure of a ribbon includes large, tabbed toolbars, filled with graphical buttons and other graphical control elements, grouped by functionality. Such ribbons use tabs to expose different sets of controls, eliminating the need for numerous parallel toolbars. Contextual tabs are tabs that appear only when the user needs them. For instance, in a word processor, an image-related tab may appear when the user selects an image in a document, allowing the user to interact with that image.
Use of the term "ribbon" dates back to the 1980s and was originally used as a synonym for plain toolbar. However, in 2007, Microsoft used the term to refer to its own implementation of tabbed toolbars encompassing a conglomerate of controls for Microsoft Office 2007, which Microsoft calls "The Fluent UI". Although Microsoft popularized the term with a new meaning, similar tabbed layouts of controls existed in prior software from other vendors, including 3D Studio Max R3 and later, Adobe Dreamweaver, Borland Delphi, Sausage Software HotDog, and Macromedia HomeSite.
Use of a ribbon interface dates from the early 1990s in productivity software such as Microsoft Word and WordStar[1] as an alternative term for toolbar: It was defined as a portion of a graphical user interface consisting of a horizontal row of graphical control elements (e.g., including buttons of various sizes and drop-down lists containing icons), typically user-configurable.[2][3][4]
A toolbar interface, called the "ribbon", has been a feature of Microsoft Word from the early DOS-based Word 5.5 (ca. 1990)[5] and the first Windows-based versions (activated by the "View Ribbon" menu option[6]), for which early advertising referred to the use of "the Ribbon to replace an endless string of commands to let you format characters by eye instead of memory".[3]
With the release of Microsoft Office 2007 came the "Fluent User Interface" or "Fluent UI", which replaced menus and customizable toolbars with a single "Office menu", a miniature toolbar known as "quick-access toolbar" and what came to be known as the ribbon: multiple tabs, each holding a toolbar bearing buttons and occasionally other controls. Toolbar controls have assorted sizes and are classified in visually distinguishable groups.[7][8] The new design was intended to alleviate the problem of users not finding or knowing of the existence of available features in the Office suite.[9][10] The name "ribbon" was later purported to have originated from an early design idea by which commands were placed on a long pane that could be rolled like a medieval scroll; the name was retained after the scrolling mechanism was replaced by tabs.[11]
Microsoft applications implementing ribbons each have a different set of tabs which house user controls for that application. Within each tab, various related controls may be grouped together. Double-clicking the active tab or clicking the "Minimize" button hides the command panel, leaving only the tabs visible. Repeating this action reveals the pane.[12] The ribbon consolidates the functionality formerly found in menus, toolbars and occasionally task panes into one area.[13]
In Microsoft Office 2007, only Word, Excel, Access and PowerPoint implemented ribbons. With the release of Microsoft Office 2010, however, ribbons were implemented in the rest of the Microsoft Office applications.[14][15] Microsoft Office 2010 also added additional end-user customization support to its user interface.
Microsoft gradually implemented the Ribbon in some of its other software. The fourth wave of Windows Live Essentials applications, including Mail, Photo Gallery, Movie Maker and Writer, featured a ribbon.[16] Since Windows 7, Paint and WordPad feature ribbons.[17] On Windows 8, File Explorer followed suit. Ribbons also appeared in SQL Server Report Builder, Dynamics CRM 2011,[18] Microsoft Mathematics v4.0, the desktop client for Microsoft Power BI, and some other programs that have since been retired.
Since the introduction of ribbons in Microsoft Office 2007, there has been an increase in the use of this type of interface in applications created by other developers, especially those creating tools for Microsoft-related products. Microsoft facilitated the adoption with the releases of Windows 8, Windows 7 and the Windows Vista platform update, which included built-in ribbon framework APIs, introduced to allow developers to integrate a ribbon toolbar into their applications.[19] The Nielsen Norman Group published some examples in a 2008 GUI showcase report.[20][21]
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