View allAll Photos Tagged Triangle
Triangle, Va. (April 28, 2019) – The Marine Corps Heritage Foundations 38TH Annual Awards Ceremony holds their annual awards dinner. Photo by Larry Levin
Hand screen printed, repeat made in Illustrator, stencil cut to screen print
October 2011
All textiles, clothing patterns and accessories were designed and made by Kate E. Burke.
Challenge: Triangle composition
I got several other triangle composition shots (posted to my stream), and picking only 3 was really hard! But I like this particular composition.
"Dancing Triangles" are formed by sulfur atoms on a layer of copper, which in turn rests upon a base, or 'substrate' of ruthenium. Scientists at Brookhaven Lab will study this type of configuration to understand how metal behaves on top of another. Layered metals are often used as catalysts, such as those that clean pollutants from automobile exhaust in catalytic converters.
This was the ornament at the end of the In Memoriam section of the December 1903 issue of Items of Interest.
The Flatiron Building (or Fuller Building, as it was originally called) is located at 175 Fifth Avenue in the borough of Manhattan, New York City and is considered to be a groundbreaking skyscraper. Upon completion in 1902, it was one of the tallest buildings in the city and one of only two skyscrapers north of 14th Street – the other being the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Tower, one block east. The building sits on a triangular island-block formed by Fifth Avenue, Broadway and East 22nd Street, with 23rd Street grazing the triangle's northern (uptown) peak. As with numerous other wedge-shaped buildings, the name "Flatiron" derives from its resemblance to a cast-iron clothes iron.
The building anchors the south (downtown) end of Madison Square and the north (uptown) end of the Ladies' Mile Historic District. The neighborhood around it is called the Flatiron District after its signature building, which has become an icon of New York City. The building was designated a New York City landmark in 1966, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1989.