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plain rectangles
joined with freestyle
machine embroidery
& freeform crochet elements
ambient multitechnique fusion
During freshman orientation, there is a tradition called the "trust walk" in which freshmen students follow each other blindly through a walk filled with obstacles...they are supposed to communicate to each other to get past them.
Work from Design Academy Eindhoven's Masters Programme - part of my work there as guest lecturer, exploring the relationship between trust and design
Description: Camden Trust Company, Bank
Location: 700 Block of Haddon Avenue, between Collingswood Public Library (right of image) and Chamberlain Drug Store (left of image).
Year: c. 1940's
The Cystic Fibrosis Trust is the UK's only national charity dedicated to all aspects of Cystic Fibrosis they fund research to treat and cure CF and aim to ensure appropriate clinical care and support for people with Cystic Fibrosis.
The banner outside the Wellcome Trust says it's for the 'incurably curious'. Their permanent gallery and entire visitor centre is a testament to this. Wellcome Trust have managed to execute great, engaging and interactive environments.
Here, you can choose to browse the photos, or have the pleasure of opening a cabinet door to find out more information.
Thanks to Ron Schmidt for finding and identifying this odd creature. I have never seen one of these before.
Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust
Huntingdon Valley, PA
Photos from the annual Chase the Pudding and Chase the Elf races that take place on Weymouth beach on the Sunday before Christmas in aid of the Will Mackaness Trust. This year the event was held on Sunday 21st December 2025 - a very cold, grey, gloomy and wet day! The main race is led off by the stars of the annual Weymouth Panto - this year Jack in the Beanstalk.
Cragside is a Victorian Tudor Revival country house near the town of Rothbury in Northumberland, England. It was the home of William Armstrong, 1st Baron Armstrong, founder of the Armstrong Whitworth armaments firm. An industrial magnate, scientist, philanthropist and inventor of the hydraulic crane and the Armstrong gun, Armstrong also displayed his inventiveness in the domestic sphere, making Cragside the first house in the world to be lit using hydroelectric power. The estate was technologically advanced; the architect of the house, Richard Norman Shaw, wrote that it was equipped with "wonderful hydraulic machines that do all sorts of things". In the grounds, Armstrong built dams and lakes to power a sawmill, a water-powered laundry, early versions of a dishwasher and a dumb waiter, a hydraulic lift and a hydroelectric rotisserie. In 1887, Armstrong was raised to the peerage, the first engineer or scientist to be ennobled, and became Baron Armstrong of Cragside.
In 1977, the house was acquired by the Trust with the aid of a grant from the National Land Fund. A Grade I listed building since 1953, Cragside has been open to the public since 1979.
Knole, Sevenoaks, Kent.
The National Trust.
The Orangery.
Perseus & Medusa.
An early 19th century plaster copy of Antonio Canova’s famous marble statue. Canova was testing the limits of marble, with the left arm cantilevered over empty space while holding the heavy head of Medusa.
The Orangery, which now forms the south range of Green Court, was created in 1823 at the direction of Arabella Cope, widow of the 3rd Duke of Dorset, and her second husband, Lord Whitworth. It was converted from a much earlier space in an effort to bring an element of the Gothic Revival style, so popular at the beginning of the 19th century, to Knole.
The Orangery may have been planned as a gallery for the display of Classical sculptures as well as plants. An extensive collection of bas-reliefs, inscriptions and sculpture, both antique marble pieces and much later plaster casts, is fixed to the interior walls of the Orangery and may have been part of Cope and Whitworth’s original presentation of the building. They are mentioned in John Brady’s 1839 The Visitors Guide to Knole and may have been sourced from the Continent specifically for display here. Photographs reveal that by the mid-20th century the Orangery was used for the storage of other kinds of objects too. A black and white photo from 1945 shows the three-tiered Buzaglo stove, which dates to 1774 and previously stood in the Great Hall, had been moved to the Orangery. Before it was opened to the public in 2010, the Orangery was used for garden storage.
Images from the two night dinner event for Trust America with Jeb Bush. Joel Silverman Photography, serving the Denver Metro area.
Copyright © 2013 - Erik Biasutto - All rights reserved - Only the author can allow the use of this image.
text: It is amazing to me that I have boarded an airplane and crossed over the ocean when {I DON'T REALLY UNDERSTAND} the intricacies of aerodynamics...
I believe the information on a nutrition label. {or is it that I ignore disbelief?} I will even eat in a restaurant without ever examining what is behind the kitchen door... but I don't trust you.
Are we born without trust? Or do we have it and then lose it?
A visit to the National Trust property that is Bodnant Garden. The house is not open to the public.
Bodnant Garden (Welsh: Gardd Bodnant) is a National Trust property near Tal-y-Cafn, in the county borough of Conwy, Wales, situated overlooking the Conwy Valley towards the Carneddau range of mountains. Founded in 1874 and developed by five generations of one family, it was gifted to the care of the National Trust in 1949. The garden spans 80 acres of hillside and includes formal Italianate Terraces, informal shrub borders stocked with plants from around the world, and The Dell, a gorge garden, a number of notable trees and a waterfall. Since 2012 new areas to open have included the Winter Garden, Old Park Meadow, Yew Dell and The Far End, a riverside garden. Furnace Wood and Meadow was recently opened in April 2017. There are plans to open more new areas, including Heather Hill and Cae Poeth Meadow in the future. Bodnant Garden is visited by around 190,000 people every year and is famous for its Laburnum arch, the longest in the UK, which flowers in May and June. The garden is also celebrated for its link to the plant hunters of the early 1900s whose expeditions formed the base of the garden's four National Collections of plants – Magnolia, Embothrium, Eucryphia and Rhododendron forrestii.
The former name of "Bodnant Gardens" (Welsh: Gerddi Bodnant) is still in fairly common usage.
Magnolia Walk - it leads to the Old Mill.
Sign - Bodnant Garden meadows
a beachfront condo on the beach. i thought the sign in the window was a cool idea. my sign would be: "i'm richer than you."
The banner outside the Wellcome Trust says it's for the 'incurably curious'. Their permanent gallery and entire visitor centre is a testament to this. Wellcome Trust have managed to execute great, engaging and interactive environments.
Here is a display of postcards drawn by visitors. What is great about this is that it's apparently not restricted - I can draw my card and immediately put it on display. The wall is massive, and is always full of lively, relevant contributions.
The Raptor Trust is one of the premier wild bird rehabilitation centers in the United States. Located in central New Jersey, the Trust includes a hospital with state-of-the-art medical facilities, quality exterior housing for several hundred birds, and an education building. A stalwart advocate for birds of prey for three decades, it is now recognized as a national leader in the fields of raptor conservation and avian rehabilitation.The Raptor Trust is open to the public seven days a week during daylight hours. Visitors are afforded a unique opportunity to view at close range the many hawks, eagles, falcons and owls that are permanent residents at the facility. There is no charge to visit, but a modest donation of $2.00 per person is encouraged.
The Raptor Trust - Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge - White Bridge Road Millington, New Jersey 07946-2044 -- Google Map -
Millington is an unincorporated area within Long Hill Township in Morris County, New Jersey, United States.