View allAll Photos Tagged blacksmith
In The Eager Beaver Sawmill complex in Harvest, Alabama. Several of the buildings have been constructed and decorated to give the appearance of stores and shops from the past.
Earlier this year we travelled around Arizona. No trip is complete without a visit to historic Tombstone and the re-enactment at the OK Corral. While there I took this image of a blacksmith working in a dark, cluttered blacksmith shop.
A reflected blacksmith lapwing (Blacksmith plover, Vanellus armatus) searches for invertebrates by the shore of a water hole, Mabula, South Africa. It is a common wetlands bird in Southern Africa and its name derives from its 'tink, tink, tink' alarm call, sounding like a blacksmith's hammer striking an anvil.
27/08/2019 www.allenfotowild.com
The Blacksmith Shop Bridge over Mill Brook in Cornish, NH
Multiple Kingpost Truss
Single Span
96 feet in length
Named for a local blacksmith
Photos on 10-16-22
This project began two years ago with the idea of a smithing workshop located on the inner corner of a building. To keep the house compact and have the chminey on a senseful place, a T-shaped building was the logical consequence. But I wanted to avoid a right angle between both wings of the building.
I started by building the workshop and the front door. Then added the oriel with the stained glass window as second step.
Getting all the angles right at the short roof sections of both oriels was quiet challenging.
Traditional blacksmith in Painswick, Gloucestershire.
Strobist - 1 SB800 left and 1 SB800 behind subject and to the right.
The Blacksmith Lapwing or Blacksmith Plover (Vanellus armatus) is named for its repeated metallic 'tink, tink, tink' alarm call - which sounds similar to a blacksmith's hammer striking metal.
It is distributed throughout southern and eastern Africa - where it occurs in the Savanna grasslands, wetlands, riverine forests and moist grasslands.
Source: ttps://www.beautyofbirds.com/blacksmithlapwings.html
NR6A1004
While the 'big five' attract the most attention in sub-saharan Africa, there are many attractive little birds to photograph. Near the northern edge of its range by Ndutu Lake in Tanzania I captured a blacksmith lapwing with its distinctive pied coloring and red eye. It was hunting in the dried lakeside grass for invertebrates to eat just before the start of the rainy season.
Part of a blacksmithing demonstration seen during a recent Revolutionary War era reenactment event in Wheaton, Illinois
For Our Daily Challenge: Metal; and for Cliche Saturday
HCS!
Missed building something medieval. No special techniques, NPUs or crazy angles (apart from maybe the roof), but it was fun and relaxing to build. :)
The Blacksmith Shop
Fort Langley BC Canada
📷 Fujifilm XT3
📍 Fort Langley, British Columbia, Canada
Website: www.sollows.ca
Contact and links: www.linktr.ee/jsollows
Original shot taken at the "Bath and West Country Festival 2021.
Sam Smith The Blacksmith
Tel:07714812479
Edits with Adobe Lightroom and Silver efex Pro 2
Gravestone at Kilmartin Glen, Scotland.
Thanks, thanks to thee, my worthy friend,
For the lesson thou hast taught!
Thus at the flaming forge of life
Our fortunes must be wrought;
The Village Blacksmith - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
D.R. Reis is a working blacksmith who specializes in ornamental iron, entry systems and fabrication. He was blacksmithing at the Penngrove Power Museum. Penngrove, CA., U.S.A. July 14, 2018
BUY THIS PHOTOGRAPH HERE
timothysallen.smugmug.com/Portraits/i-jSwL59L/A
See more of my photographs here timothysallen.smugmug.com
Rome, New York, USA. Upstate New York has many relics of the early Industrial Age. This is a structure near the old Erie Canal in Rome. The Erie Canal and its predecessor runs from Buffalo to Albany, New York.
Here's a MOC I was working on for the last few nights.
I used roof building technique from tutorial by @soccersnyderi
www.flickr.com/photos/66620538@N04/39587064272/in/datepos...
The blacksmith lapwing or blacksmith plover (Vanellus armatus) occurs commonly from Kenya through central Tanzania to southern and southwestern Africa. The vernacular name derives from the repeated metallic 'tink, tink, tink' alarm call, which suggests a blacksmith's hammer striking an anvil.
Blacksmith lapwings are very boldly patterned in black, grey and white, possibly warning colours to predators. It is one of five lapwing species (two African, one Asian and two Neotropical) that share the characteristics of a carpal (wing) spur, red eye and a bold pied plumage. The bare parts are black. Females average larger and heavier but the sexes are generally alike.
Photographed in Lake Nakuru National Park, Kenya.
Yet another shot of the blacksmiths at St Fagans museum of Welsh life.
I've done this three times before over the years, each time with a better camera and capturing more detail.
As it was, it's not actually that sharp, as shutter speed was very slow, even with image stabilizing!
HDR from a single Raw
I really cranked up the highlightsand contrast on this one, and not sure if it was a good idea or not...