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Kitchen Table

Circa 1955

Apshawa, New Jersey

 

Scanned from Polaroid

www.1001pallets.com/2013/07/pallet-picnic-table/

 

Here are a couple of great uses of pallets turned into Children's Picnic Tables.

  

More information at website !

Idea sent by Aaric Geihl !

Ready to tuck into a nice juicy steak at my local watering hole! Mmmmmnn!!............a lazy sunny day, just right for a pint and a good scoff!! ;)...........try the Corona with a slice of lime, or the Desperados when your posting to the Four Outlaws!!..........he he!! www.flickr.com/groups/1734120@N20/

      

Looks at it's best when viewed large, press L on your keyboard.

 

www.flickr.com/photos/51789932@N02/7342488080/sizes/l/in/...

   

Copyright © 2012 Ray Wood. All Rights Reserved.

 

www.fluidr.com/photos/51789932@N02

 

www.flickriver.com/photos/51789932@N02/popular-interesting/

 

en.flickeflu.com/photos/51789932@N02

An portable Oakworks Wellspring massage table with high-tech Aero-Cel padding and UltraTouch Upholstery.

Table Mountain, beautiful skies, rocky foreground

Quincy Market, Boston after hours

Table in Court Martial Room in the Post Headquarters at Fort Scott National Historic Site in Fort Scott Kansas.

 

The original Post Headquarters was built in 1848 and it housed offices for the commanding officer, adjutant, and the ordnance sergeant. It also was where court-martials took place. A man was killed when the building was a general store in 1858. The current building is a reconstruction.

 

Fort Scott was established in 1842 and it was closed in 1853. It held troops for the Civil War and protection for railroad expansion. The fort and town are named after General Winfield Scott who did not like that a small fort in Kansas bore his name. It became a National Historic Site in 1978.

Fort Scott never did have a wall around it. It was built upon a bluff which had three steep sides and opened up to prairie in a gradual slope on the south. Many forts were not built with walls at the time; the fort with a stockade is more a product of Hollywood mythology than actual fact.

 

Also Fort Scott is the only Nation Park Service entity that was directly involved in "Bleeding Kansas." Fort Scott was a proslavery town, but many free staters lived in the surrounding area. Located on the grounds was the Western or Proslavery Hotel, directly across from it was the Fort Scott or Free State Hotel.

National Register #66000106. Added in 1966.

 

For more information:

www.nps.gov/fosc/

www.kshs.org/resource/national_register/nominationsNRDB/B...

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Création Bambou

Denis Argaut

31160 Saleich

tel : 0619204196

mail : arts.murs@free.fr

site web ; creationbambou.blogspot.fr/

 

credit photo: dust

 

mes autres photos : www.flickr.com/photos/misterdust/

  

plus d'info sur ArtZethic : artzethic.canalblog.com/

contact : artzethic@gmail.com

 

Mosaic table top.

"This wake-up meal will put you in the pink."

The top was manufactured using 15mm thick toughened glass and had a white colour applied to the reverse. A 15mm thick UV bonded base was manufactured to support the top.

Pictorial Table Rug

Artist unidentified.

Possibly Otisfield, Oxford County, Maine

c. 1840.

Wool appliqué, gauze, and embroidery on wool.

29 x 53"

Collection American Folk Art Museum, New York

 

Courtesy of Art Knowledge News.

This was a part of the decorations at each of the tables at my son's wedding. It is a long time exposure, as the room was quite dark. I used a pop can to steady the camera.

A dramatic sunset at Table Rock Lake

Jim and Helen Ede's House

Kettle's Yard

Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England, UK

 

Kettle's Yard House

 

Between 1958 and 1973 Kettle's Yard was the home of Jim and Helen Ede. In the 1920s and 30s Jim had been a curator at the Tate Gallery in London. Thanks to his friendships with artists and other like-minded people, over the years he gathered a remarkable collection, including paintings by Ben and Winifred Nicholson, Alfred Wallis, Christopher Wood, David Jones and Joan Miro, as well as sculptures by Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, Constantin Brancusi, Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

 

At Kettle's Yard Jim carefully positioned these artworks alongside furniture, glass, ceramics and natural objects, with the aim of creating a harmonic whole. His vision was of a place that should not be

 

"an art gallery or museum, nor ... simply a collection of works of art reflecting my taste or the taste of a given period. It is, rather, a continuing way of life from these last fifty years, in which stray objects, stones, glass, pictures, sculpture, in light and in space, have been used to make manifest the underlying stability."

 

Kettle's Yard was originally conceived with students in mind. Jim kept 'open house' every afternoon of term, personally guiding visitors around his home. In 1966 he gave the house and its contents to the University of Cambridge. In 1970, three years before the Edes retired to Edinburgh, the house was extended, and an exhibition gallery added.

 

Today each afternoon (apart from Mondays) visitors can ring the bell and ask to look around.

An area called Reynolds Pk which has foot path's and picnic table's.

Table setting for dinner, New Year's Day, at Phil and Sarah's place in Columbus.

©2010.zachary.sirèns.de.la.fête.photography

 

lindas, cap hill, sea

Worldwide Photo Walk

10/11/14

Hendersonville, NC

A Narra Table with Turned Legs

33” x 31” x 55” (84 cm x 79 cm x 140 cm)

 

Opening bid: PHP 15,000

 

Lot 760 of the Leon Gallery online auction on May 30-31, 2020. Please see leon-gallery.com/auctions/León-Exchange-15th-Online-Auct... for more information.

My God, this was tedious. I remember trying to capture this dozens of times over with frustrating results. I had to do it all myself see - and this was before I had a remote clicker - which meant selecting self timer, dashing to grab the bat and ball and timing the serve perfectly so that the swing of the bat and bounce of the ball would be captured.

 

Perseverance payed off however - this is unquestionably my personal favourite picture that I have ever taken. The best part for me was noticing that the pink ball appears slightly more solid at the point that it bounces. (Does that make sense?) Look closely at the picture and hopefully you see what I mean.

 

Exposure: 1/10 second

Much of the trail in the beginning is just a path mowed in grass right through a field of wildflowers.

Cape Town, South Africa

Sunrise along the Central Oregon Coast near Yachats.

 

Alvin, Reggie and I met up with Andrew for a sunrise shoot along the coast. Andrew was nice enough to drive over to catch the sunrise with us and a great cup of coffee afterwards. Always great seeing him and hanging out for a bit.

 

This is a cool little spot that has several channels running along the rocks that can only be shot at lower tides which we happen to have this morning. I grew up fishing out on these rocks with my grandfather and I really hadn't had an excuse to come back out to this spot until I got into photography. It's a great place to get connected with the ocean up close and personal (hopefully not too much so) and it also brings back so many good memories of my youth.

 

I hope everyone has a fantastic day!!!

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The base of table rotate around axis, and make table high and low (coffee).

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