View allAll Photos Tagged LIBRARY
I have finished the drawing of library ladders that I have been doing over the last few days at work. See it as a work in progress on my blog
www.alissaduke.com/2014/10/a-library-ladder-work-in-progr...
watercolour pencil
see more of my book and library drawings gathered together at www.flickr.com/photos/alissaduke/sets/72157648983342201/
aka the Abraham Glen House, a rare "Dutch Colonial heavy timber frame house" built in the 1730s and in use as a library since 1930. In 2004 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Scotia, New York.
The public library at CS Lewis Square, on the Newtownards Road, in East Belfast.
Photographed with the Nikon FM3a on Ilford HP5, ISO400 film and developed in Fotospeed FD10.
The library of Turku, Finland.
Leica M8.2 with Carl Zeiss Biogon 2.8/25
My portfolio here: www.flickr.com/photos/harrivayrynen/albums/72157624394324660
The library is very warm and comfortable....though my preference is scrolls over books. Time moves forward and who am I to stop it?
Marsh’s Library was founded in the early eighteenth century by Archbishop Narcissus Marsh (1638-1713).Designed by Sir William Robinson (d.1712) the Surveyor General of Ireland, it is one of the very few 18th century buildings left in Dublin that is still being used for its original purpose. Many of the collections in the Library are still kept on the shelves allocated to them by Marsh and by Elias Bouhéreau, the first librarian, when the Library was opened.
Children's Library, showing the 'magical apple tree' and its bespoke circular seating with integrated book storage.
Cincinnati, OH. May 24, 2020. Shot on a Nikon F6 and Kodak Portra 160. Developed and scanned by The Darkroom.
Free Libraries arose as a result of the Public Libraries Act 1850. The aim of such libraries was to provide facilities for self-improvement through books and reading for all classes, not just those who were wealthy enough to afford their own private libraries and collections.
Opposition to the 1850 Act centred on fears that public access to certain publications would neither promote civil society nor act as the intended form of social control. Libraries would instead become sites of social agitation. This issue was linked to broader concerns that extending education to the lower orders of society would lead to libraries becoming working class "lecture halls" "which would give rise to an unhealthy agitation"......
A special library serving both the research needs of scientific communities and a general public looking for information and entertainment.
Running out of new photography due to the lockdown and looking back to some older images - in this case the Library of Birmingham in January 2014
A circa 1900 taxi stand at the U.S. Capitol. Cabbies wait patiently, with the new Library of Congress looming majestically behind them. From a recently acquired glass lantern slide.
umm, looking for other photos for work-related reasons, but this reminds me of those brilliant "tilt-shift" photography photos come across recently via boingboing.com. but, this is just a real scene taken from the top level of the state library of victoria.
This is a place you can always find ducks and geese.. and Flowers in season.. This is not the front of the building even tho it looks like it.. The front door is on the right side where the parking area is but I think this is a lot more beautiful... Happy Windows Wednesday, Everybody
Manchester Central Library is the headquarters of the city's library and information service in Manchester, England. Facing St Peter's Square, it was designed by E. Vincent Harris and constructed between 1930 and 1934. At its opening, one critic wrote, "This is the sort of thing which persuades one to believe in the perennial applicability of the Classical canon". The form of the building, a columned portico attached to a rotunda domed structure, is loosely derived from the Pantheon, Rome.
The library building is grade II* listed. A four-year project to renovate and refurbish the library commenced in 2010. Central Library re-opened on 22 March 2014.