View allAll Photos Tagged Ceilingfans
Barbara's house is a plethora of photo ops.
Taken with iPhone 6s, cropped square in Snapseed, final edit in Hipstamatic using Helga Viking lens, Blanko film, and Tasty Pop flash. Watermarked with Impression app.
10570 Harrison Ave, Harrison, OH. Built in 1981.
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There was a young man
Who photo-ed a fan
When asked why
He said, "Why?"
"Well, because I can"
Reflection of the ceiling fan and the room is on a 1 1/4 inch stainless steel ball bearing. Using natural room light and the Canon 500D close-up lens.
The line voltage had gone through the roof, causing the fan to fritz out.
Ironic, having consistently high voltages in a land plagued by power shortages.
We used to get on top of tables and hang our heads over the edge and look at the room upside down to imagine the ceiling was the floor and the floor was the ceiling.
Sometimes a change in perspective is exactly what one needs.
This is my studio where I design websites & speak with customers. Note: Chalkboard on left to brainstorm ideas.
Experimenting with zoom blur but too lazy to get out of bed. The fan looks like a spaceship!
Camera: Nikon D90
Lens: AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm 1:3.5-5.6G ED VR
Mailed from Milwaukee, Wisconsin to Miss Josi Lusthavel of St. Louis, Missouri on July 8, 1911:
I "used" to "hang out" here. Some place too.
Love, Chas. 7/8/11
Jno T. Faber, Publisher, Milwaukee, Wis. Made in Germany
Number: 181
CAPA-000380
"Summertime"
Feature film shot in NYC - Cinematography: Andreas Thalhammer and XiaoSu Han
directed by Max Weissberg
still frame from RED ONE and Cooke S2 lenses
Space Mountain looms in the distance, framed by the pillars of the newly-renovated Fantasyland train station in Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom.
#Lighting - The first Belt Driven Ceiling Fans -was used in the United States 1860-1870.An exact date cannot prove itself. At that time, there were no electric motors for ceiling fans. The ceiling fan was Instead, by means of a belt drive and pulleys move. The belt itself was controlled by a steam turbine. ...
This little set was a lot of fun to build. I'm particularly happy with the diagonal walls and the small kitchen counter area.
Huck’s is on Main Street, just a stone’s throw from the RR tracks. More candy than you could eat In a lifetime, cards, cool t-shirt, specialty soft drinks, hand-made soaps and more are featured in this neato shop.
125 pictures in 2025 #67 "on the ceiling"
This is just the ceiling fan in the bedroom, but I tried to make a little spooky (that season is rapidly approaching).
3 shots handheld HDR!!
This is a shot of Agape Cafe and Caterers across the street from the Civil Supreme Court were I was for Jury Duty!! There were few places where I could go and eat. I walked in a Deli and for some reason didn't like the atmosphere. But when I entered the first time at Agape Cafe, didn't think twice.
Will tell you more about Agape, the place, the food and about the beautiful owner, Charlotte, in a later post. Meanwhile if you are from NY and would like to see the Supreme Court bldg., and get some shots, stop by Agape for a delicious cup of coffee or your favorite cold drink or a bite to eat. You won't miss it, here is the address: 88-44 Sutphin Blvd, Jamaica NY,!! Take the F train towards Jamaica, get off Sutphin stop, walk two block South and on the corner across the Court House is Agape. If you see Charlotte and or Lorraine, say hi and tell them that Houry sent you!!
The trees you see thru the windows belong to the Court House Gardens!!
I am sure you will be welcomed to photograph, the place only, with their permission!!
Thanks for stopping by and commenting!!
While sitting on the commode I saw my ceiling heater fan floating before me in thin air. It was so trippy : )
A cool ceiling fan at the Beef Island airport. It makes me happy to know that some British Virgin Islands official approved the use of "Big Ass Fans" at their main airport.
UPDATE 7/17/12: 6,734 views and finally one fave! Thanks, kimstebbins!
Mechanically, I have little skill.
Such a realm escapes me, for the most part. In attempting to install or repair things around our house, I think I'm incredibly lucky that I have not yet severed a thumb or exploded my heart with electric current. The fact that I haven't ended up in the hospital with souvenir X-Rays that show a hammer lodged in a very uncomfortable place is... well, just shy of miraculous.
Point of the story, we installed a ceiling fan. It's mostly correct. It works.
And this is the clasp from the chain of that fan.