View allAll Photos Tagged Integrity
The south façade of the former NatWest Bank headquarters at Bank Junction features a pair of statues by sculptor Charles Doman, depicting allegorical figures that symbolise financial virtues. Integrity is shown here as a venerable man with a beard. He holds a locked ledger and stands on more ledgers. The light of truth is at his feet.
Integrity Synergy wearing Jetta's top and skirt, Jerrica's tights and, though you can't see them, Rapture's shoes... The furniture is vintage Sindy, accessories are mostly Re-ment.
Jaeme shares similar destiny as Joan. She waited nearly a year me to take her photo. Sunny weather calls for bright sunny clothes.
Industrial Photography "Structural Integrity" - abstract view of an abandoned coal mining facility, lost to modern ways but not forgotten in history.
peacewith2fingers.blogspot.com
*You can purchase prints on ETSY:
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Peace!...with 2 fingers;)
Michigan
Memorial Day Weekend 2011
May 2011
LaFarge Integrity, Benton Harbor / Saint Joseph, Michigan
© 2011 Michael Lavander. All rights reserved.
No usage without written permission.
Quick pics - I like her a lot! Even the bump, which I absolutely hated when I saw the first pics.
Dress by Habilis, shoes by Integrity
The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
Two stone figures guard the main entrance to the bank on East 6th Street. According to an internal Federal Reserve document, Building of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, dated March 1, 1937, the female figure on the right entitled Security, “gazes forth in firm strength, clad in armor and bearing in one hand her iron-bound casket, in the other her sturdy sword.”
The same source notes that Integrity, the statue on the other side of the entrance, is “crowned with olive,…her gaze fixed on a future untroubled by doubt. In one hand she bears the important rolls of office … In her other, she raises a rod, tipped with an uplifted right hand symbolic of the oath… of responsibility.”
Three larger-than-life statues grace the exterior of the Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank, these two in stone and one other in bronze. All three were sculpted by Henry Hering of New York City, a student of the sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
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