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The NEES Equipment Site at the University of Nevada, Reno is a multiple-shake-table facility (with three identical biaxial and one six degree-of-freedom shake-tables) that is suitable for conducting research on long, spatially distributed, structural and geotechnical systems. The facility is operational and managed as a national shared-use NEES equipment site, with teleparticipation capabilities, to provide new earthquake engineering research testing capabilities for large structural systems through 2014.

Ikea table and chairs for my lovely niece and nephew. Using Vinyl and the silhouette Cameo.

Yashica M test shot

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TABLE LAMP XVIII

The lamp is made of Senegalese gourd.

White carvings are deeper layer of wood which allows some light to pass through it.

At the top of the lamp is closing part locked with little magnets. The base is finished with black jeweller waxed string.

Diameter of the gourd is 21cm. Lamp is 35,5cm high. Diameter of the base is 24,5cm.

On top of Table Mountain, Cape Town, South Africa

The brief for this table was that it had to be capable of being taken apart so that it could fit in a suitcase as I had to deliver it to Germany and assembly it there. Hence the design of the sliding dovtails holding the legs to the top. This allows it to be easily dissasembled. On the next version of it I made it taller and made the legs more slender as I didn't have the same limitation on its size.

Located in "the heart of the Meatpacking District," Macelleria serves Northern Italian cuisine and steak.

I used the Blackwork Sampler pattern to make a table runner red. It took forever, but it was a fun project. Most of the patterns are repeated once.

West Desert, Juab County, UT

View "Two Picnic Tables" on black or on white.

 

© 2020 Jeff Stewart. All rights reserved.

A Table Mountain view from our hotel room window.

We are studying the art of table top at school. I choose to photograph some Origami stuff because I love paper, specially the texture and colours of the Japanese ones.

 

If you are interested in my latest work, want to see behind the scene, or just curious, go to my facebook page:

www.facebook.com/aurelie.bellacicco

fruit bowl and newspaper on the kitchen table in the sun

Sweet glass and crystal table lamp crafted from vintage lamp parts with a "shabby" handmade shade. Lamp's overall height is approximately 22 inches. New electrics.

 

Table Rock near Greeville, SC. Photo taken fr om the overlook at Caesar's Head State Park at 200mm. View our entire trip in Virtual Reality with 360 Photos and 360 Videos at carolinas.open.tours

Silent auction tables filled with sports memorabilia and more

SpaceJoist tops tables...

 

Probably not what immediately comes to mind when you hear the words “metal web tables” - ITW Industry’s new SpaceJoist SJ10 webs have been incorporated into a unique set of table tops as part of a project commissioned by The Environment Centre Café, Swansea.

 

The tables were designed and made by Fform of Swansea - specialists in sustainable design. Designers William Thomas and Matthew Rayner recall their initial thought process – “Part of the Environment Centre’s philosophy for sustainable living is Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. There is often a predetermined style associated with this – particularly when using recycled wood. We decided to move away from this style focussing on 'Reduce’. Technological advances such as SpaceJoists can be as environmentally effective and sustainable as reusing or recycling.”

 

SpaceJoist metal web joists of course are known to provide a firm, long spanning floor with much less environmental impact than concrete floors – especially when timber is sourced from a reputable managed forest and vertical end timbers are made from roof truss production off-cuts.

 

The pair continued to explain the conceptualising stage – “Inspiration to use SpaceJoist came whilst eating a falafel opposite a small building site installing them. We noticed that they could provide a design solution to a problem we were having creating a 5 metre breakfast bar type shelf which had to be as lightweight and as see through as possible. SpaceJoist’s lightness both visually and practically combined with a similar wood and steel aesthetic to the surrounding architecture made it an excellent solution.”

 

SpaceJoists were next laid flat and integrated into the café’s table tops. Fform initially approached Holbrook Timber Frame Ltd of Bridgend who supplied the product and technical assistance they required to complete the unorthodox SpaceJoist project. The designers commented – “This was developed to create interesting patterns of interconnecting SpaceJoists as tables are butted together”. Cullen bolts were used to secure the galvanised table legs which match the SpaceJoist finish. The table tops are finished with a translucent galvanised style pattern to the glass surface.

 

The Environment Centre Café and shop is open to the public with a variety of other commissioned art and design pieces around the building. Fform Design can be contacted at info@fformdesign.co.uk. For further information on the new improved SpaceJoist metal web floor joist range, visit www.itw-industry.com or contact ITW Industry’s Customer Services on 01592 771132.

Este producto fué exhibido en la International Contemporary Furniture Fair - ICFF 2008 que se realizó en Nueva York.

Se trata de dos láminas de acero que se ensamblan sin necesidad de herramientas. Cada una de las láminas es el negativo de la otra, optimizando los recursos y reduciendo los desperdicios durante el armado. La mesa se arma plegando estas láminas como si fuera un Origami

www.moveyourmind.es/antiguos/la-mesa-origami/

Sheraton Side Table

Early 20th Century

Narra, Lanite, Kamagong and Carabao Bone

H:40” x L:53” x W:25 1/4” (102 cm x 135 cm x 64 cm)

 

Opening bid: P 300,000

 

Provenance:

Baliuag, Bulacan or Angeles, Pampanga

Private Collection, United States

 

Lot 13 of the Leon Gallery Auction on 10 June 2017. Please see www.leon-gallery.com for more information.

 

The United States was the colony’s biggest trading partner during the 1st three-quarters of the 19th century. Periodicals and magazines brought in by American traders and businessmen introduced the Sheraton Style of furniture as interpreted by Duncan Phyfe in New York. The style became popular in the Philippines during the 2nd quarter of the 19th century onwards and greatly influenced furniture made in Gapan, Nueva Ecija and Baliwag, Bulacan. In the early 20th century, Teodoro Tinio of Angeles, Pampanga began making inlaid furniture that were greatly admired by American servicemen in Fort Stotsenberg (now Clark Field), who bought them to bring home to the United States as souvenirs.

 

This small and unusually high narra sideboard in the Sheraton Style is part of a dining set that included the so called ‘magic table’ and set of dining chairs. It has a serpentine front with a wide bow-shaped center flanked by narrower concave sides and stands on six tapering legs. The four legs in front and the two behind have turned, tapering shafts carved with reeds resting on a small bun foot topped by a turned reel surmounted by a ring. A vase and spool turning above the reeded shaft continues upward to become the carcass frame. The turned leg replaced the tapering square legs of Sheraton style furniture after the 1850s.

 

The square upper part of the leg has line moldings and is inlaid on the exposed sides with a stellar flower composed of eight elongated diamond-shaped lozenges radiating from a central bone disk. The two pairs of legs in front that support the concave sections are joined together by concave, bow-shaped arched aprons bordered with lanite line-inlay at the bottom and inlaid with a stellar flower in the middle. Wider, straight and narrow arched aprons with the same pattern and inlay join the side legs together.

 

The wide apron in the middle, actually a drawer and can be pulled out, is a double-yoke shaped arch ornamented with an inlaid pattern of symmetrical lacy vines of lanite with extremely fine diamond-shaped lozenges forming leaves. The horizontal carcass frames and drawer supports of the piece are inlaid in front and at the sides with a series of diamond-shaped lozenges within a border of molded edges.

 

The sideboard has a pair of drawers, one on top of each other, flanking a single, wide one at the center which is on the same level as the upper drawers. Those at the sides have concave faces, each with a keyhole and turned kamagong drawer pull inlaid with a bone disc. The bow-fronted middle drawer has a pair of pulls and a large inlaid pattern of curving vines with extremely fine diamond-shaped leaves practically covering the entire face of each drawer.

 

The sides of the sideboard is carved with a large almost square carved panel inlaid with a border of diamond shaped lozenges like those on the carcass frames that enclose a large pattern of lacy vines and diamond shaped leaves surrounding a stellar flower at the center.

The top of the sideboard is a single, beautifully grained narra plank with a serpentine front, its edges incised with a pair of grooved lines to form a border of straight moldings on either side of diamond-shaped lozenges of carabao bone arranged just like those in the horizontal carcass frames.

 

-Martin I. Tinio, Jr.

Design: Pim Geerts

base: Eames LTR side table.

top: lego bricks

 

Table is antique but in good shape. Can seat up to six, four chairs with dark paisley upholstery included. $200

I made this quilt for my sister, Jenny.

I designed the fabric and had it printed at Spoonflower.com

The fabric can be purchased here:

www.spoonflower.com/fabric/653419

  

5 huge bean bag chairs + 1 table = an hour and a half of acrobatics

@ This stage- it's just "tacked" together.

Later >

Welds need to be ground smooth.

Surface Preparation for Sandblasting.

Sandblasted steel accepts a Patina Finish more readily-

more evenly- and just get's all the metal "on-the-same-page"

 

Following the patina neutralization process- I will them add a baked-on

Matt Clear Powder Coating.

 

Copyright International Paralympic Committee

 

Copyright International Paralympic Committee

from DC or MC

designed by: Gisela Maier

19 inches in diameter (blocked) composed of 23 rounds of main doily

6 rounds (back and forth) of outer petals individually to complete 8 petals 2 rounds of edging.

made with: white Cannon cotton thread #8 and No. 8 hook

done: June 30, 2008 edit

One of the rare Victorian pubs which remains more or less unaltered, conveniently situated near the Brompton Oratory, Harrods and the Victoria and Albert Museum.

Here is the overhead shot of the finished table. I love it. It was a lot of work, but well worth it.

 

Read all about the conversion here: www.pacificdesignsblog.com/2010/10/how-to-make-sewing-tab...

Mercer's mom and her helpers created a beautiful table

Showing the detail of the base of the

60" x 96" Golden Gate Table

 

BLM photo: Kyle Sullivan, February 5, 2021.

 

Lower Table Rocks is one of the most iconic landscape features in the Rogue Valley. Lower Table Rocks has a great hiking loop for people of any age, and the hike to the top of Table Rocks is a great workout with rewarding views.

 

These flat-topped buttes rise approximately 800 feet above the north bank of the Rogue River in southwestern Oregon. Upper and Lower refer to their positions relative to each other along the Rogue River; Lower Table Rock is located downstream, or lower on the river, from Upper Table Rock.

 

The Table Rocks were designated in 1984 as an Area of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) to protect special plants and animal species, unique geologic and scenic values, and education opportunities. The remarkable diversity of the Table Rocks includes a spectacular spring wildflower display of over 75 species, including the dwarf wooly meadowfoam (Limnanthes floccosa ssp. pumila), which grows nowhere else on Earth but on the top of the Table Rocks. Vernal pool fairy shrimp (Branchinecta lynchi), federally listed as threatened, inhabit the seasonally formed vernal pools found on the tops of both rocks.

 

The 4,864-acre Table Rocks Management Area is cooperatively owned and administered by the Medford District Bureau of Land Management (2,105 acres) and The Nature Conservancy (2,759 acres). Memorandums of Understanding signed in 2011 and 2012 with the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde and the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians allow for coordinating resources to protect the Table Rocks for present and future generations. A cooperative management plan for the area was completed in 2013.

 

If you've never been, start planning your trip right here: www.blm.gov/or/resources/recreation/tablerock/index.php

OFFICIAL WEBSITE: calabarte.com/

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TABLE LAMP XVIII

The lamp is made of Senegalese gourd.

White carvings are deeper layer of wood which allows some light to pass through it.

At the top of the lamp is closing part locked with little magnets. The base is finished with black jeweller waxed string.

Diameter of the gourd is 21cm. Lamp is 35,5cm high. Diameter of the base is 24,5cm.

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