View allAll Photos Tagged RESTORATION
This photo was given to me by someone at photoclub the other night, he asked me if i could do anything with it, it was a picture of his daughter who was sadly lost in a bike accident when she was 26, the photo was very orange and noisy as shown here so i corrected the colour the best i could and then gave it a digital painting type finish which helped to smooth out the noise i then mounted and framed it, and was quiet pleased with the end result.
A resident of Port Orange looks out to Rose Bay and the dredge that will remove accumulated sediment lying on the bottom of Rose Bay.
With the restoration work of this section of canal comes a price for walkers. The towpath was completely churned up and thick mud that was very difficult for walking. Can the towpath be restored too please?
My restoration of Mrs D'Arcy's: www.flickr.com/photos/mrsdarcy/145904491/in/pool-90604013...
I didn't do this one earlier because it's so low of a resolution. That makes it very hard to do a decent job on it.
The 1st on left is the original photo.
The middle one is restored but desaturated. Most of what I did was autocolor, desaturate then multiply layer. I adjusted white & black points in levels. I used mostly the blur tool set to lighten & darken. That's how I got rid of pixelation on skin & light spots on photo.
The right one was just colored with tan brush set to color.
Elite Flood Damage & Contents Specialist is proud to offer water damage and water restoration services to residential and commercial owners. We specialize in Water clean up, emergency response - 24 hours a day and we will be insurance direct.
The first vehicle ever owned - extremely rare 1950 Commer superpoise CCH432 was purchased in the 1980's from a Derby scrapyard. Now restored and has been used at steam fairs for over 20 years.
Under restoration at IWM Duxford is Avro Shackleton MR3 XF709. The Shackleton was a long range maritime patrol aircraft used by the RAF in the 1950s and 60s. Work is progressing although I believe this project will take a number of years to complete.
81 of 125 pictures in 2025 - Restoration
Pine Bend Scientific and Natural Area was protected through an FMR-prompted partnership between landowners and state and local agencies. It is now a long-time favorite of FMR's habitat restoration volunteers.
Must credit Tom Reiter for FMR
View from above of the Target Range Restoration Project, Brodsworth Hall, Doncaster, South Yorkshire.
This area wasn't always totally lawn. There used to be crazy paving winding through shrubbery and bedding areas. The paving is still generally intact underneath the lawn. The paving was exposed from under the grass in September last year. This stage is removing the rest of the grass to create flower beds between the paving.
As a garden volunteer, my job for the day was lugging wheelbarrows overladen with turf un a steep hill. I needed my Radox Muscle Soak Bubble Bath that evening.
This is the second set of progress shots in a 'work in progress' to be continued during 2019.
My visit(s) to the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility [12] Restoration shop overview. [SRT-103-18A]
The 1889 log-bottom Chesapeake bugeye Edna E. Lockwood's loblolly pines logs have been secured after a two year search, thanks to a very generous donation by Paul M. Jones Lumber Co. of Snow Hill, Md.
On the morning of March 5, 2016, delivery of the loblolly pine logs needed for the restoration of the nine-log bottom hull of the 1889 bugeye Edna E. Lockwood— the last historic log-bottomed bugeye still under sail—took place at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum.
With transportation costs of the logs generously underwritten by individual donors, the pine logs are being trucked to St. Michaels, and will be submerged in the Miles River for preservation until the restoration project continues later this year.
Johnson Lumber of Easton, Md. is delivering 16 logs—allowing overages if needed for the project—with the logs averaging 55-feet in length, and a 10-foot circumference.
Five years after the arson attack that utterly ravaged the building, St Nicholas's at Radford Semele is undergoing the final phases of it's reconstruction. The exterior now looks close to how it did immediately before the fire, though on the north side significant changes are now apparent with the new glazed gable that will be a prominent feature of the new reorientated and modernised interior.
I shall be back here again in a few weeks time to reinstall the rose window on the south side, a replacement of my original Millennium window that was destroyed in the fire (only a week after I joined Flickr in 2008, ironically the old window had been one of my very first uploads a few days before!)