View allAll Photos Tagged Insulated
What was fiberglass insulation now hangs down from ceiling beams, moist with mold and natural decay, as the building surrounding it slowly succumbs to nature's unfriendly march of time on the afternoon of January 29th, 2022, in Meadowview, VA.
Insulators and fuses on lines headed underground from the above ground feeder line. Utah County, Utah. Happy Telegraph Tuesday!
Sunset makes even some abandoned parts pretty.
Cellphone picture, minimal PP so the color matches what I saw.
LIGO Hanford Observatory, Washington, USA.
cranked the red,yellow,orange ok for slider Sunday and found the blue slide to the left gave the black an interesting look.had to crank it back right just enough to get back the one blue windowpane.yes that's insulation behind the glass. HSS! ( -: A big thank you to all that comment and fave my pic. I appreciate it!!! :- ) A big HWW for the Window Wednesday group also.
Insulated and equipped with heating and cooling for hauling bulk potatoes. Also an information over load concerning the care and handling of the foam insulation. Foam applied 12-69 so these cars came just prior to the merger with Burlington Northern.
NP 419911
5-2-76
Excerpt from agb.life/visit/exhibitions/holding_up_the_sky:
Caroline Monnet: Holding Up The Sky
Lee-Chin Family Gallery
In this survey of new and recent works, multidisciplinary artist Caroline Monnet centers geometries, especially the cube, to draw attention to how different spatial relationships condition the way that we live and think. Monnet’s practice moves between textiles, photography, sculpture, and film to address the complexity of Indigenous identities and bilateral legacies, drawing from her Anishinaabe and French heritages. In her work, traditional Anishinaabe sacred geometry transforms and softens the industrial into something more personal, constructing a new point of view—centering the cube. As a form, the cube is present in architecture and many traditions of building, shaping the way we understand the world and dictating the ways in which we live, play, and learn. And, like the repetitious creations unfolded in birch biting, Holding Up The Sky follows a symmetrical continuum.
The exhibition features her new work The Room (2023), a ten-foot square construction of industrial-grade styrofoam, a material used in residential buildings to create water and air-resistive barriers and insulate against inclement climate conditions. The Room is open on one side, exposing the box and welcoming the audience into its constructed space. The foam is incised with a repetitive pattern; the motifs, inspired by traditional Anishinaabe iconography, break the strictness of the industrial square form by introducing the personal and the poetic into architectural rigidity.
In conversation with The Room is Pikogan (Shelter) (2021), a sculptural work with voluminous curvatures constructed of reticulated polyethylene pipes, PVC conduits, copper, velcro, and steel. The materials are bent to shape, working against the prescription of colonial architecture, and resisting the urge to square and compartmentalize. The fluidity of the circle intentionally builds from knowledge rooted in the past. This can also be seen in the direction of Monnet’s recent photographic works that depict a formal arranging and rearranging of foam “beads” into cubed borders. Manipulating the material for the camera leads to endless possible formations and configurations.
A series of technical drawings from Monnet’s early career (2014) of multiple cube structures are seen alongside a new series of diagrams, completed in a Swedish residency, mapping the ceiling of her studio. Positioning these works in conversation illustrates the circular process of Monnet’s practice—from drafting architectural forms, to utilizing structural design to underscore the severity of the housing crisis, to manipulating industrial material into textile creations and wearable fabrics, and returning to schematic renderings and geometric linework. These are simultaneously performances for the camera and blueprints for future work.
Born to an Anishinaabe mother and a French father, Caroline Monnet is from Outaouais, Québec, and now based in Montréal. After studying at the University of Ottawa and the University of Granada, in Spain, she pursued a career in visual arts and film. Her work is regularly presented internationally and can be found in prestigious museum, private, and corporate collections. Monnet has become known for minimalist yet emotionally charged work that uses industrial materials and combines the vocabulary of popular and traditional visual cultures with the tropes of modernist abstraction to create unique hybrid forms. She is represented by Blouin Division Gallery.
At the AGB, we lean into our unique position of being a public art gallery at the crossroads of craft and contemporary art production and presentation. Monnet’s work examines the traditional craft of Anishinaabe embroidery and textiles in alternative methods and materials, exemplifying the potent fluidity of craft and contemporary art. Holding Up The Sky continues the dialogue on how new material engagement takes up space within craft and how traditional and ancestral knowledge of art production is being represented in the expanded field of contemporary art institutes.
Another outing with an old manual lens on a Nex-7 around Dolcoath Mine.
I love the colour of this glass so I thought it would be good to "Insulate" them from the background.
Birds stay warm in the winter by trapping pockets of air around their bodies when they fluff up like this. Plus this guy has been eating well.
Song Sparrow (Melospiza melodia)
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
Parallel transport lines with an interesting collection of insulators. South Jordan, Salt Lake County, Utah.
Happy Telegraph Tuesday!
. . . Pierce-Stocking is still pretty scenic! Located right next to Lake Michigan in The Sleeping Bear National Lakeshore, the waters of the big lake insulate the trees from the colder temperatures, and so they hang on to their leaves just a little bit longer.
Have a great week Facebook and Flickr friends!
Fifty two amber Whitall Tatum 216s and some other various glass and mud, and one bullet damaged plastic recovered on a quick hunt, sit on my friend’s 2005 Buick granny cruiser.
Good times!
4/25/2025
Electrical Safety. Light duty cords do not provide the same abrasion and electrical protection as double-insulated heavy-duty cords
An insulated building for storing winter lake-ice for summer culinary use. Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown’s commission at Compton, from 1768.
Insulative spiral separating the glowing filament and cylindrical cathode inside a vintage vacuum tube.
Compositionally Challenged, Rainbow Game - Orange
Insulated.
التباين الفردي مع القوى المتعارضة زادت القمة التي تحلم بالإرهاق النفسي حالات الإنتاج البلاستيكي المفككة الأغراض,
périls possédés plates-formes mises en scène complexes négociations actions chorégraphiées acteur de renom expressions théâtrales atypiques cirque grotesque,
rhythmische Chöre intensive Innovationen abstraktes Publikum Perfektion spielt verschiedene Farben Ahnenszenarien unabhängiges Bild schreiendes Orchester,
φιλοσοφικά κινήματα δυνατές κουρτίνες υποδιαιρεμένα δράματα πνευματικά οράματα εκστατικές παραστάσεις περίεργοι τρόποι στερεότυποι χαρακτήρες,
trawsnewid llygaid modelau a yrrir confylsiynau coesau profiadau arteithiol mygydau seicolegol tagu calonnau dwylo diniwed,
gesturi sângerânde distrugeri necheltuite camere de sulf strălucitoare comori idolatrie castele riscuri voci victorioase cărți realizate,
先例は握りしめているメモを回します達成された目標無知な鎖ひどい最小の答えをつかむ利益を生む崩壊姿勢は死を反映する泡を許しました.
Steve.D.Hammond.
HAPPY TUESDAYS TEXTURES!
CLICK ON IMAGE TO EXPLORE DETAILS.
It is still summer, but it's never too early (or too late) to insulate!
I ran across this interesing juxtapositon of two kinds of insulation in "indefinite storage" at the Kreiterhof.*
* Kreiterhof (see location below) is an amazing, amusing 200+ year-old rural establishment. Between Easter and late December, you can go there for a casual outdoor lunch or dinner. Before or after, you can wander around a mind-boggling accumulation of outdoor-stored industrial devices, objects and materials. They are waiting to be used...for something, sometime. Also, in the November-December holiday season you can pick out and purchase a live Christmas tree. It is then cut for you to take home.
Location: Kreiterhof, near Village of Nebenau, District of Lörrach, Baden-Württemberg DE.
In my album: Dan's Crazy Collections.
At least the one in front thought so, staying for about half an hour. They are clearly well insulated! It's unusual to see them on the ice, and the light was so nice yesterday morning, so I hope you don't mind that another goose shot or two are likely coming. Canada Geese, Siskiyou County, California
This is a 40’ Canadian National insulated boxcar. This boxcar was built right at the end of 1959 and is distinct for having a plug door.
Pattern by Erin Erickson-Dog Under My Desk
Fabric- The Birds and the Bees-Tula Pink and black linen
Lining-Ripstop Nylon
An easy to follow pattern. I added an exterior zippered pocket and lined it with insul bright. I used cotton webbing for the handles. I love the way it turned out!
insulated isothermal wagon model 16-6935 was designed for the Baltika Breweries LLC on the base of covered wagon model 11-280 built by Altayvagon (code 22) and was produced from 1991 y. This car was refurbished by the "Wagon repair depot Pavelets" (code 416, Moscow region) in 2017 y from the car made by the Altayvagon in 2004. Due to some internal modifications made for beer's glass bottles transportation its internal space reduced to 100 m3 from initial 138 and load is shortened to 63 t. This car has lost both the characteristic original blue coloring of the Baltika cars that appeared on the railroads in the late 1990s and large inscription "Baltika" the last obviously because of the law on advertising of alcoholic beverages, however, it retains a small inscription "БАЛТИКА" seen to the upper right.
The Baltika brewery (пивоваренная компания Балтика) was built in Leningrad in the new mixed-use district of Parnas according to the design of the Gipropischeprom-2 Institute. Construction of the brewery began in 1978 and was completed in 1990, just a year before the collapse of the USSR, with the brewery receiving the most modern equipment. In 1992, like most other enterprises, it was privatized and reorganized into a joint stock company of open type (ОАО Балтика). The largest shareholder and investor of Baltika became the Scandinavian holding Baltic Beverages Holding AB (BBH), later absorbed by Carlsberg and Scottish&Newcastle. The company promptly developed a line of new beers called Baltika No. (from 0 to 9 as the strength and ageing increases), which became extremely popular in the 1990s in the former USSR and was sold abroad. In 2008, Baltika fully joined the Carlsberg Group, which became the owner of 85% of shares; in 2012, the Carlsberg Group bought the remaining shares from minority shareholders, becoming the owner of 100% of Baltika Breweries. In 2013, a decision was made to change the organizational and legal form from a joint stock company to a limited liability company. Today Vladimir Putin signed a decree on nationalization of the company.
Skoal!