View allAll Photos Tagged Labyrinth,
Sonata Arctica + Labyrinth + Triosphere + Awake By Design @ The Wulfrun Hall, Wolverhampton - 18th March 2011
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'Emboss' type labyrinth. North Ealing, 3rd February 2017.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'Square' type labyrinth. Preston Road, 30th December 2016.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'Square' type labyrinth. Ealing Broadway, 8th December 2016.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'Medieval' type labyrinth. Canons Park, 2nd Febuary 2017.
Long Sleeve photo of Labyrinth.
Design: Wendy Bernard
Model: Mitsukai
Photography: Jennifer Hansen
Technical Editor: Danna Spiro
Stunt Stitching: Sarah Wilson
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'East' type labyrinth. Heathrow Terminal 2&3, 16th March 2017.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'Native American' type labyrinth. Queensbury, 2nd February 2017.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'East' type labyrinth. Mansion House. 1st June 2016.
One of 270 unique enamel artworks by Mark Wallinger placed at each station on the London Underground. 'East' type labyrinth. Bethnal Green, 30th January 2017.
Labyrinth orbweaver spider
(Metepeira labyrinthea)
10/05/2008
Arcadia, California
Blogged at www.kolbykirk.com/news/2008/10/06/labyrinth-orbweaver-spi...
www.kolbykirk.com/news/2008/10/06/labyrinth-orbweaver-spi...
Labyrinth is 20" x 19" and is made of various green prints and solids with Kona White. She is a log cabin quilt coloured to resemble a labyrinth and is my entry into the Emerald Challenge.
At Grace we do a grass-mown labyrinth in the churchyard every year, but we haven't done an indoor one since 2004 because we didn't have our own cloth. So yesterday afternoon we made one with hessian and duct tape. The octagonal pattern was surprisingly easy to tape out - it took three people two hours.
There are two labyrinths in New Harmony, Indiana. This one is a large maze made of green hedges that stand a little more than waist-high on an adult. The little stone structure is the center of the labyrinth.
This is a reconstruction of the labyrinth that stood in New Harmony during the time of the Harmonie Society. Their labyrinth was used as a meditational or devotional tool, meant to give them time to ponder their life's journey back to God while they tried to find the center and then find their way back out.
I wanted a shot of the whole labyrinth, but I would have needed a ladder, and I didn't have one. And even if I did, I'm afraid to climb a ladder, so it would have been a challenge to get a clear shot with my hands shaking so badly! I have this photo located on my Flickr map, and the satellite view of that map gives you a nice view of the whole labyrinth. I hope my account settings let you see the map. I've had troubles getting that public setting to stick...
Here's a weird thing. The "Welcome to Missouri" rest area along Interstate 55 features a huge tree in the middle of sidewalks spun into a spiral, so that it looks like one of those New Age labyrinth things certain Boomer-age people get so excited about. I don't know what the deal with this is, but it makes me think of a boss I had back in my newspaper days. She was a Boomer woman who'd been born in Kentucky, but sometime around the time she turned 20, she moved to California, where she spent much of the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. Then she spent some time in Salt Lake City before coming back home in the mid-1990s to Kentucky, but she still had all that New Age West Coast crystal-granola spiritualism. One of the things she believed was that labyrinths had special power, and that if you walked one while banging a drum, it linked you to special lines of power and gave you a better life.
I don't know if that's what this is about. It's Missouri, so you wouldn't think so, but you wouldn't think you'd learn about labyrinths from your boss at a small Kentucky newspaper, either. Maybe Missouri truckers are unusually spiritual.
I have had this piece of fabric for over a year, its a bed sheet I found in a charity shop and it is a much more amazing green than this photo shows.
I walked a seven path labyrinth last summer and it was a beautiful spiritual experience for me. So I endeavored to make one of my own that I could walk whenever I wanted. However a seven path labyrinth wouldnt fit on my fabric and allow feet to walk it at the same time, so I have made a little 3 path one instead, Im sure it will be awesome to walk anyway and I will make a bigger one in the future, This was definitely a labor of love.
It is a flat double sheet, to give you an idea of scale.