View allAll Photos Tagged Louver
Went to VooDoo Larry's open house with BFF's Brian and Liz. Had a really great time and took bunch of pics for first time this year. Used my 10-22mm wide the whole day which was a lot of fun..
copyright SB Imageworks
Vines and Ivy grow around a louvered window on a barn found on an abandoned farm in Adams County, Pennsylvania.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 150mm lens.
Kodak Tri-X 400 ISO B&W film, shot at ISO 320.
1/60th second at F16.
Developed in Adox Rodinal 1:50 dilution for 9 minutes, 20 seconds @ 20 degrees Celsius in Pattern 3 reel tank using hand inversions.
120 negative scanned with Epson V600.
Louver roofs are good accent.
---------------------------------------------------------
Seijo Kinoshita Hospital (成城木下病院).
Architect : Kengo Kuma And Associates (設計:隈研吾建築都市設計事務所).
Contractor : (施工:).
Completed : February 2017 (竣工:2017年2月).
Structured : Steel frames (構造:鉄骨造、一部鉄筋コンクリート造).
Costs : $ million (総工費:約億円).
Use : Clinic (用途:病院).
Height : ft (高さ:m).
Floor : 3 (階数:地上3階、地下1階).
Floor area : 26,601 sq.ft. (延床面積:2471.36㎡).
Building area : 8,473 sq.ft. (建築面積:787.25㎡).
Site area : 15,771 sq.ft. (敷地面積:1465.21㎡).
Owner : Seijo Kinoshita Hospital (建主:医療法人社団九折会 成城木下病院).
Location : 6-13-20 Seijo, Setagaya Ward, Tokyo, Japan (所在地:日本国東京都世田谷区成城6-13-20).
Referenced :
A bicyclist rides past the colonnade of sun louvers at Rafael Viñoly's Carl Icahn Laboratory on the campus of Princeton University.
Rows of sharply angled louvers cascade down the façade like synchronized origami sails, turning an ordinary office block into a kinetic sculpture of light and shadow. The late-afternoon sun carves deep diagonal stripes across the concrete, while a lone classical cornice intrudes on the left-an architectural photobomb that highlights the dialogue between old ornament and modern rigor.
The louvered facade of the Walkie Talkie skyscraper blocks out the sky of the older brick building in the foreground. These louvres were retro-fitted to the Southern facade as the building was reportedly responsible for 'melting' cars briefly leading to revised nickname of the Walkie Scorchie Fryscraper.......
This photo shows very graphically just one of the very many architectural contrasts that exist in the City of London. Some might find such contrasts jarring but I find them fascinating.
Click here for more shots taken during this, and previous years, Photo24 events : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/albums/72157667520181380
From Wikipedia : "During the building's construction, it was discovered that for a period of up to two hours each day if the sun shines directly onto the building, it acts as a concave mirror and focuses light onto the streets to the south. Spot temperature readings at street-level including up to 91 °C (196 °F) and 117 °C (243 °F) were observed during summer 2013, when the reflection of a beam of light up to six times brighter than direct sunlight shining onto the streets beneath damaged parked vehicles, including one on Eastcheap whose owner was paid £946 by the developers for repairs to melted bodywork. Temperatures in direct line with the reflection became so intense that a reporter for the newspaper City A.M. was able to fry an egg in a pan set out on the ground. The reflection also burned or scorched the doormat of a shop in the affected area. The media responded by dubbing the building the "Walkie-Scorchie" and "Fryscraper".
In September 2013, the developers stated that the City of London Corporation had approved plans to erect temporary screening on the streets to prevent similar incidents, and that they were also "evaluating longer-term solutions to ensure the issue cannot recur in future". In May 2014, it was announced that a permanent awning would be installed on the south side of the higher floors of the tower."
My Website : Twitter : Facebook : Instagram : Photocrowd
© D.Godliman
TOUS DROITS RÉSERVÉS
Le contenu de ma galerie ne peut pas être reproduit, téléchargé, publié ou modifié sans ma permission.
Instagram : www.instagram.com/christian_gueirard/
Copyright Robert W. Dickinson. Unauthorized use of this image without my express permission is a violation of copyright law.
Taken at the Highline Auto Show on High Street in northeast Phoenix on 7/2/22.
Olympus E-M1X and OM System 20mm f1.4 Pro lens with circular polarizer.
I've never shot with Copex Rapid before, it's very interesting stuff. I'm glad I have a couple more rolls to try. I'd like to try it in 120 as well. Agfa (branded Rollei) Copex Rapid shot at ISO 50 with 21mm Voigtlander Color Skopar on Canon IVSb2. Developed in Caffenol.
ICU nurse taking care of a boy with covid-19 respiratory failure.
Taken in Infection Disease Clinic, K.Jonscher Children's Hospital, Poznań
Louver Museum, Paris
To see more of my photos (mostly of Persian artefacts and the Louver building) click here
خشت های رنگی ایران باستان
برای دیدن عکس های من از موزۀ لوور روی لینک بالا کلیک کنید
با بهترین آرزوها برای شما و میهن عزیز ما در سال 1391
نوروزتان مبارک
Fancy a 4-wide or 6-wide louvre (louver)? Well here you go!
(Construction details in next image.)
I was looking at teunisdavey's extra-tidy louvers (here) and got to thinking whether a re-arranged geometry would work, using a ½-plate gap between each layer. With a bit of fiddling, here's what I came up with. Both designs have their faults, not least of which is that the 4-wide one takes a lot of space front-to-back. Anyway, enjoy if you will/wish.
From thedailylumenbox.com
Adox CMS 20 II shot at ISO 25 with Leica Ic and Voigtlander (Cosina) 15mm Super Wide Heliar. Developed in Adox Adotech IV for 11 minutes at 79° F.