View allAll Photos Tagged Pipes
Tokyo, Japan
A long time ago, I used to make square pictures with my phone and post them on Inst*gr*m....
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Lloyds Of London(Abstract). Taken a few weeks ago while in London with Caroline and John. These pipes were at the side of the building tucked away from view.
Taken on a recent trip to Edinburgh.
Nikon FM2n with 50mm pancake. Film is Fomapan 100 devd in Rodinal. Paper is Kentmere FP Fibre dev'd in Moersch Eco 4812. Toned in Moersch Siena MT4, Sodium sulphite to stop.
Camera: Rolleiflex 2,8e
Lens: Zeiss Planar 1:2,8 - 80mm
Film: Lomography Potsdam 100
Development: Rodinal (1+50), 9:30 min, 24°
Scan: Epson V850 Pro
Here are some of the remaining riveted pipes that fed water into the Duck Reach hydro electric station. In this post-industrial age it is a wonderful thing to see such dedicated workmanship in the crafting of metal pipes.
Raffinerie R
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AAW: October 14 - 20: Industrial
WIT: Looked around for industrial looking scenes, and right under my nose was this set of pipes that looked pretty industrial. In post, added some grain, increased contrast and saturation to give a post-apocalyptic look to it.
Wool Mill R1 - The textile factory was built for a capacity of 12000 spindles in 1869. This album is about the power plant.
On our eighth Monarch’s Way walk we visited Hampnett Church which has beautiful painted walls, the work of a Victorian vicar who wanted to recreate the look of a medieval church. I don’t know whether he was responsible for the decorated organ pipes as well. After reading a little more of this story it seems that the painting might not all have been done by the vicar...and the decoration was not necessarily well received by parishioners at the time!
The so-called Organ Pipes are situated near the small inselberg of Burnt Mountain, west of the town of Khorixas in Namibia. They are a rock formation that comprises a group of columnar basalts which resemble organ pipes.
The Organ Pipes were formed about 150 million years ago as the result of the intrusion of liquid lava into a slate rock formation, which was exposed over time by erosion.