View allAll Photos Tagged Bricks
Photo by Xi (Cecilia) Zhang. The local restaurant locates in the Bardstown St. The porch tiled stained brick and iron-cast ornament extended the space of the entrance. It reminds me the Red School which intended to give us a historic feeling of tradition..
Woody's Grocery Store in West Carrolton (Dayton area), Ohio. These are some of the windows in the walls ...
Brick Head 3 by James Tyler - Brick Head Series. The "Brickhead 3" sculpture is located in Davlan Park, on the 400 block of Massachusetts Avenue in downtown Indianapolis. James Tyler is an Indianapolis native, currently living in Nyack, New York.
Close to the nature reserve and either on the edge of, or within, the green belt depending on who you ask, this entire new suburb is being built. It's odd to see it happening, though it has of course happened many times in the UK (Skem, Kirkby, Croxteth, etc). This is on a smaller scale, being a suburb rather than a town.
The tenements that they're building reminded me a lot of Edinburgh's New Town area. What impressed me was that despite the fact that they're being erected at the same time, by the same contractors, and undoubtedly to the same design, they've taken the time to specify different bricks on each of the buildings, giving it a bit more of an organic feel.
Not a difficult thing to do, but most UK developers wouldn't bother.
to make the bricks, once we've cut some polystyrene sheet to size, we carved the faces with a wire brush
The copal shutter is almost silent but this group of people turned their head around after I released it.
Kodak T-Max 400 - TMax Developer 1:4 - 7 min @ 20°C
Manual Exif: 1/8 f/3.5 ISO400
I can't recally the significance at the moment. I'm pretty sure it was significant, though. Schoolhouse, perhaps? It was on the historic National Road, in eastern Ohio.
Years ago, apparently the engineering school at WVU was experimenting with these cylindrical concrete stones, and my Grandpa got a bunch for either free or cheap... and used them to build all the garden walls. They are very nice and honestly stay right where you put them without mortar for... well.. they've been there 40 years. A few got hit by cars and they just fell over, they didn't break.
You can see them a few other places in town but as far as I know you can't get them anywhere.
They are super-great and I love them.