View allAll Photos Tagged DropCeiling
No one should add drop ceilings anywhere, especially in a house from 1910 and especially not in the bathroom! Oh, and it's flower print!
But my eye caught that crazy wood paneling and the awesome lighting shapes (and the water stains just add character), and there was only one angle I could get by wedging the camera between the gate's bars. I have no clue what this store used to be, nor did my boyfriend, but it still had some mysterious machinery inside with a thick layer of dust on top that looked suspiciously like a photo enlarger used in my high school photojournalism class.
Sunrise Mall, Corpus Christi, Texas
A luggage cart on the second floor main lobby. This area was covered in a purple-mauve wall-to-wall-to-ceiling carpet which was replaced during the 1997 renovations. The doily umbrella came with us because it was pouring rain.
On Saturday, April 26, 2014, 300 volunteers repaired 9 homes, painted 2 murals, and installed 50 solar-powered safety lights in the Sandy-damaged neighborhood of Canarsie, Brooklyn for National Rebuilding Day.
Our hotel room at the Super 8 hotel in Columbus, OH, 07/03/07
The broken fire alarm that would go off at 3 AM, not pictured.
New drop ceiling panels and lights. New tables, counter, appliances, cabinets, base molding, epoxy floor. Painted walls and drop ceiling frame.
This building had drop ceilings, and seemed to be a confusing combination of temple and a rather odd office...
shot this a few years ago. the whole day was pretty surreal. i kind of wish they had the bingo signboard all lit up, but alas.
On Saturday, April 26, 2014, 300 volunteers repaired 9 homes, painted 2 murals, and installed 50 solar-powered safety lights in the Sandy-damaged neighborhood of Canarsie, Brooklyn for National Rebuilding Day.
The drop ceiling on the top floor was removed to provide the fire alarm technician access to the wiring for the hoistway heat and smoke detectors (the red wires seen here).
A valve for a decorative fountain in the indoor pool area of the Pines Hotel. Note the bizarre red liquid in the fountain. The drop ceiling, when wet, exudes a thick red liquid not unlike blood in appearance. I worked in a blood lab and still did a double take when I saw it.