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The Tulsa Post Office and Federal Building is on the National Register #00000244. It was constructed in 1917 at half its current extent and was doubled in size in the 1930s.
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.
A really cool, but way too expensive, glass light fixture at an antique store.
Cleveland, TN. 113019.
Posted via email from jennifer neubauer's posterous
At the location house in Pasadena, CA for a Target commercial. Not sure if they're the homeowner's or if Art Department put them up. Cardboard along the walls is protection...
This is pretty much the pathological case for lens flare on my 50/1.4, I think. Pretty colors.
Thursdays are hard because I think it's cheating to just take pictures of Laura or Annie every Thursday, but that's the main thing I do after work.
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 restoration of the historic Bass Mansion at the University of St. Francis is pretty much complete.
John Henry Bass, a key force in the growth of 19th century Fort Wayne, built Brookside as the centerpiece of his country estate on what is now Spring Street. After fire destroyed the first home, he rebuilt Brookside in 1903 as a steel-framed, sandstone-encased house. The founder of Bass Foundry decorated the mansion with intricate woodwork, fine artwork, valuable antiques and elegant furnishings.
The Sisters of Saint Francis of Perpetual Adoration bought the home and 65 acres south of Spring Street from the Bass family in 1944. They moved what was then Saint Francis College from Layfayette, Indiana to Fort Wayne. The mansion served as the college library until the university opened the Lee and Jim Vann Library in August 2006.
Old Seoul Station, built in 1900, had been lying abandoned and neglected ever since the shiny, big and new Seoul Station was built next door in 2004.
I'm so glad they are using it for art exhibitions now. Last week I went to the Seoul International Photography Festival there. I did spend a lot of time looking at the photos, but mostly I was mesmerized by the fancy old chandeliers. I hope they preserve these ornate light fixtures.
WHITEvoid distributes the second generation of its "kinetic lights" modular winch system
The new "kinetic lights" product lifts up to 5 kg and features full color RGB and RGBW (plus white) LED output. Each winch is individually addressable via DMX for dynamically contolled cable acceleration and velocity control. The current winch generation is also equipped with an auto setup function with cable end position self-detection.
The new winch design has won the iF Product Design Award 2011
The kinetic lights technology is registered for a patent. The patent is pending.
The system is now available for rental or purchase. Please find detailed information on the "kinetic lights" project website:
The restoration of the historic Bass Mansion at the University of St. Francis is pretty much complete.
John Henry Bass, a key force in the growth of 19th century Fort Wayne, built Brookside as the centerpiece of his country estate on what is now Spring Street. After fire destroyed the first home, he rebuilt Brookside in 1903 as a steel-framed, sandstone-encased house. The founder of Bass Foundry decorated the mansion with intricate woodwork, fine artwork, valuable antiques and elegant furnishings.
The Sisters of Saint Francis of Perpetual Adoration bought the home and 65 acres south of Spring Street from the Bass family in 1944. They moved what was then Saint Francis College from Layfayette, Indiana to Fort Wayne. The mansion served as the college library until the university opened the Lee and Jim Vann Library in August 2006.
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.