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This stunning 1.2mm thick copper sheet features a beautiful natural finish, making it a striking addition to any kitchen as a splashback. Unlike many cheaper alternatives, our copper sheets maintain excellent rigidity, allowing for easy handling and installation. Each splashback is custom-made to suit your specific dimensions, ensuring a perfect fit for your space. The unique patina on every piece guarantees that no two splashbacks are alike, adding a touch of individuality to your kitchen. Additionally, each splashback is protected with a high-quality clear lacquer finish, enhancing its durability and preserving its stunning appearance.
Fort Wilkins, near Copper Harbor, in the northern Keweenaw Peninsula of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
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Made with Art Clay Copper using a paisley texture mat and a vintage cookie cutter that I used when I was a child. I torched the copper after burnishing to get the rainbow effect.
copper printing paper box sample maker cutter table
Carton box Sample Maker Fast Efficient Packaging Solution Cutting Machine
E-mail: aokecut@163.com
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contact person Mrs betty
Copper sheet etched with a Celtic dragon, domed and soldered to a copper back. Trimmed with sterling silver ring
My Dad handmade this copper plate, and hand carved all the celtic details onto it. He also carved the blue stone that rests in the setting.
The remains of a Britannia Copper Mine Building on the Miners Track from Pen-Y-Pass round to the foot of Snowdon.
An Art Nouveau square shaped copper kettle with Bakelite handle on trivit stand. Manufacturer and date unknown.
Crosby Garrett, Cumbria, England
Copper alloy
The helmet at right depicts the idealised, youthful face of a Trojan with curly hair, wearing his traditional hat, known as a 'Phrygian cap'. One of the finest and most complete cavalry parade helmets ever found, the skin area is still silvered, and the curls originally contrasted in bronze. It was likely the prized possession of a skilled cavalryman in one of the regiments stationed on Britain's northern frontier.*
From the exhibition
Legion - life in the Roman army
(February – June 2024)
From family life on the fort to the brutality of the battlefield, this exhibition experienced Rome's war machine through the people who knew it best – the soldiers who served in it.
Few men are born brave; many become so from care and force of discipline.
Vegetius, Fourth-century Roman writer
The Roman Empire spanned more than a million square miles and owed its existence to its military might. By promising citizenship to those without it, the Roman army – the West's first modern, professional fighting force – also became an engine for creating citizens, offering a better life for soldiers who survived their service.
Expansive yet deeply personal, this exhibition transported you across the empire, as well as through the life and service of a real Roman soldier, Claudius Terentianus, from enlistment and campaigns to enforcing occupation then finally, in Terentianus' case, retirement. Objects included letters written on papyri by soldiers from Roman Egypt and the Vindolanda tablets – some of the oldest surviving handwritten documents in Britain. The tablets, from the fort near Hadrian's wall, revealed first-hand what daily life was like for soldiers and the women, children and enslaved people who accompanied them.
Roman military history perhaps stretches as far back as the sixth century BC but it wasn't until the first emperor, Augustus (63 BC – AD 14), that soldiering became a career choice. While the rewards of army life were enticing – those in the legions could earn a substantial pension and those entering the auxiliary troops could attain citizenship for themselves and their families – the perils were real. Soldiers were viewed with fear and hostility by civilians – not helped by their casual abuses and extra roles as executioners and enforcers of occupation – and they could meet grim ends off, as well as on, the battlefield. Finds in Britain, featured in the exhibition, included the remains of two soldiers probably murdered and clandestinely buried in Canterbury, suggesting local resistance.
What did life in the Roman army look like from a soldier's perspective? What did their families make of life in the fort? How did the newly-conquered react? Legion explored life in settled military communities from Scotland to the Red Sea through the people who lived it.
[*British Museum]
Taken at the British Museum
Traverse City, Mich. - 10/11/2005 - Owner Peggy Fisher does a little housekeeping in her cafe called Copper Ridge Cafe. The Cafe is located in the Northwest Michigan Surgery Center on Park Forest Drive and specializes in hot soups, sandwiches, salads, and other items to go or to be eaten in the cafe. (AP Photo/Traverse City Record-Eagle, Douglas Tesner)
Copper-rumped Hummingbird " Amazilia tobaci erythronotus"
Very common resident that is widespread on both Trinidad & Tobago.
The Copper River & Copper River Highway taken from an Alaska Airlines 737 on approach to Cordova, Alaska.
The Copper-rumped Hummingbird, Amazilia tobaci, sometimes placed in the genus Saucerottia, is a small bird that breeds in Venezuela, Trinidad and Tobago, and has occurred as a vagrant on Grenada. It is a seasonal migrant in parts of Venezuela.
This hummingbird inhabits open country, gardens and cultivation. The female Copper-rumped Hummingbird lays its eggs in a tiny cup nest on a low branch, or sometimes wires or clotheslines. Incubation takes 16-17 days, and fledging another 19-23, and there may be up to three broods in a season. It is the predominant species of hummingbird in Trinidad and Tobago.
The Copper-rumped Hummingbird is 8.6 cm long and weighs 4.7 g.
Copper wire has been bent and hammered to form this simple hair stick. Accented with green glass beads that have been wrapped with thin copper wire.
Copper Dead Sea scrolls found at Qumran, on display in the Jordan Archaeological Museum. From the 1st century AD.