View allAll Photos Tagged Rustic
These images were made during a journey down Rustic Road 58 in Oneida County on June 20, 2017.
R-58 skirts scenic Northwoods’ lakes while wandering through thick pine and hardwood forests. This route crosses a railroad bed used in the 1800s as a main line to Minocqua. It has been converted to the Bearskin State Trail for hiking and bicycling. This route intersects with the Tomahawk River and two small creeks, through cedar lowlands and dense pine and hardwood forests.
Wisconsin's Rustic Roads system was created to preserve many of the state's scenic, lightly traveled country roads. Features of Rustic Roads include rugged terrain, native vegetation and wildlife, or open areas with agricultural vistas.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
Rustic pavillion made of squarecut beams with woven branch lace-like detail in the rafters. Suitable for woods, lakeside, oceanside or anywhere you wish an outdoor lounge, platform or even a covered dock. Comes with copyable brass lantern to light your nights. Copy/Mod
Wind River Homes
Dreamwalker/82/195/3002
InWorldz grid
© 2014 Darlene San Agustin.
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The use of these photographs for any purpose without the permission and approval of the photographer is considered a violation of copyright laws. Please exercise intellectual honesty.
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a female Rustic bunting sitting on recently cut reeds in the marshy area of the old palace ruins in Saidaiji, Nara.
These images were made during a journey down Rustic Road 32 in Marinette County on June 24, 2017.
R-32, Wisconsin’s longest rustic road, offers a 37-mile journey through several county parks and the Peshtigo River State Forest. The route features multiple species of hardwoods and conifers, along with numerous granite boulders and outcroppings. R-32 also offers vistas of the Thunder and Peshtigo rivers.
Wisconsin's Rustic Roads system was created to preserve many of the state's scenic, lightly traveled country roads. Features of Rustic Roads include rugged terrain, native vegetation and wildlife, or open areas with agricultural vistas.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
Rustic pavillion made of squarecut beams with woven branch lace-like detail in the rafters. Suitable for woods, lakeside, oceanside or anywhere you wish an outdoor lounge, platform or even a covered dock. Comes with copyable brass lantern to light your nights. Copy/Mod
Wind River Homes
Dreamwalker/82/195/3002
InWorldz grid
Rustic inscription from the Forum. I've seen this in so many books about letterforms that I just had to take one photo for myself.
The Rustic Pavilion beside the Wildlife Refuge Pond at Tower Hill Botanic Garden. In the foreground, daffodils bloom in the meadow.
I decided to make homemade pasta, but didn't have a machine to press or cut them; I ended up just using a rolling pin and a knife.
“It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the chain of destiny can be handled at a time.”
Copper windchimes/suncatchers made from recycled copper wire, twisted and shaped into little owls, brass light bulb fitting eyes with soldered brass beads, wrapped with red copper wire, with brass and copper textured leaves and glass red berry beads
Rustic mailbox. Made from new wood and metal, hand carved and hand forged. Natural wood finish. Leak proof plastic box inside.
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I create different one of a kind art furniture, design and decor. Check out my website and Houzz page!
These images were made during a journey down Rustic Road 118, located in the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, in Forest County on June 22, 2017.
R-118 begins in the historic logging town of Wabeno and travels through Native American lands and crosses several creeks.
Wisconsin's Rustic Roads system was created to preserve many of the state's scenic, lightly traveled country roads. Features of Rustic Roads include rugged terrain, native vegetation and wildlife, or open areas with agricultural vistas.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.
These images were made during a journey down Rustic Road 74 in Florence County on June 21, 2017.
Located within the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest, R-74, a gravel route, passes the former Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) Camp Newald which operated from 1933–1942, and crosses the Popple River, a designated Wisconsin “Wild River.”
Wisconsin's Rustic Roads system was created to preserve many of the state's scenic, lightly traveled country roads. Features of Rustic Roads include rugged terrain, native vegetation and wildlife, or open areas with agricultural vistas.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved.