View allAll Photos Tagged LightFixture
The Jellico Motel, just off I-75, Jellico, Tennessee. I haven't been able to determine exactly when it closed, but it appears to still have been in business in at least 2014.
In 1957, Edmund Bacon, the executive director of the Philadelphia City Planning Commission, awarded developer-architect firm Webb and Knapp the competition for the redevelopment of Society Hill. Architect I. M. Pei and his team designed a plan for three 31-story Society Hill Towers and 37 townhouses. The Towers and townhouses project was completed in 1964, while the entire plan was completed in 1977.
In the Society Hill Historic District #71000065 and #71001102.
Hegle chased her "being naughty on the turntable" portrait yesterday with a showcase of another of her nastiest habits -- chasing the dining room chandelier. (She's tough to get in focus because she just goes and goes and goes.)
Photos taken for an Inhabitat.com article. For commercial use of these works and any derivatives, contact Leonel Lima Ponce or Inhabitat.com.
New coffee shop in Astoria, Queens, interior and furniture designed by Ecosystems.
Accompanying article:
inhabitat.com/nyc/the-queens-kickshaw-astoria-gets-a-new-...
By nosing around an unrenovated '21-tier apartment downstairs, I figured out where all my original wall light fixtures were located. They had long-ago been removed and the electric boxes patched-over and hidden. I have excavated one of them and luckily the wires are still live! But a local on/off switch is required. Is the switch I've rigged underneath this fixture too funky or unsightly? I don't think I mind it, but I am seeking other opinions. (The fixture I'm using is actually meant to be a porch light!)
The Jellico Motel, just off I-75, Jellico, Tennessee. I haven't been able to determine exactly when it closed, but it appears to still have been in business in at least 2014.
Light fixture and ceiling of regulator house at the McMillan Sand Filtration Site, in northwest Washington, DC.
The Jellico Motel, just off I-75, Jellico, Tennessee. I haven't been able to determine exactly when it closed, but it appears to still have been in business in at least 2014.
Grand Bazaar to Grand Central event in Vanderbilt Hall, Grand Central Terminal, 89 E. 42nd St., Midtown Manhattan. (Photograph by Elyaqim Mosheh Adam.)
• www.twitter.com/elyaqimnyc/status/334370784573259776
• www.twitter.com/elyaqimnyc/status/334372789580615681
• www.twitter.com/elyaqimnyc/status/334375228765519873
Fonds Trutat - Photographie ancienne
Cote : TRU C 709
Localisation : Fonds ancien (S 30)
Original non communicable
Titre : Tympan de la porte latérale de la cathédrale, Cahors, 1891
Auteur : Trutat, Eugène
Rôle de l’auteur : Photographe
Lieu de création : Cahors (Lot)
Date de création : 1891
Mesures : : 12 x 16 cm
Observations : Notes de la main de E. Trutat : "obj. hémisphérique rapide, papier Eastman"
Mot(s)-clé(s) :
-- Tympan -- Cathédrale -- Sculpture -- Bas-relief -- Christ en majesté -- Mandorle -- Les apôtres -- Colonne -- Chapiteau -- Lanterne
-- Cahors (Lot) -- Cahors (Lot ; canton) -- Midi-Pyrénées (France) -- Cathédrale Saint Etienne (Cahors)
-- 19e siècle, 4e quart -- Epoque romane
Médium : Photographies -- Négatifs sur papier -- Noir et blanc -- Eastman -- Vues d'architecture
Bibliothèque de Toulouse. Domaine public
The Jellico Motel, just off I-75, Jellico, Tennessee. I haven't been able to determine exactly when it closed, but it appears to still have been in business in at least 2014.
At the west end of the garden, stairs down to the path at the base of the slab wall. The head of the stair is lit, the last few steps like the path itself are not.
In reality, that is looking up at a light. I used the fastest shutter speed, the lowest ISO, and the smallest aperture. Then I went for the metallic look in post-processing.
Persistent URL: digital.lib.muohio.edu/u?/snyder,3680
Subject (TGM): Women's education; Parlors; Living rooms; Interiors; Light fixtures; Fireplaces; Chairs; Tables; Furniture; Pianos; Musical instruments; Universities and colleges;
I think only about half of these are still in play. But I forget all the time the ones we have anyway.
The fifth light fixture is lit up and working. The 12 gauge wire hanging off to the side is determined to be "hot", ready to be fed into the sixth light fixture.
I adore these ceramic lights from the 1930's. We had similar ones in my Grandparents home that was built in the late 30's. They made matching ceiling lights. Would be cute in a bathroom or nursery.
This place was wonderful - great food and a kitschy atmosphere. If all of you in the Northeast are wondering why you can't find 1950s chome tables and Mid-century advertising that's because it's all here at the Friendly Toast.
I hate this light fixture. hate hate hate. I want to change it for something else but
1) I don't know what
2) I don't know how
I'm sure I can figure out #2 on my own. but I need some opinions for #1.