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Light bracket on wall of the old Palace Theatre building. An outdoor lamp on a chain and electrical wire used to hang from this bracket, above one of the doorways around the side of the building.
It was buried more than 6" deep. As it turned out, all the finds I made were buried this deep, maybe due to hillside erosion?
Bracket fungus "fruiting bodies" in great abundance on decaying tree trunks. Near the Braid Burn, Hermitage of Braid, Edinburgh, Scotland.
Starting out with a 1" solid square bar-
I "carved" the steel to create a notched area,
to mate w/ the chains curve,
and then, reduced the back side to fit snugly into a punched hole
in the .1875" thick mounting plate, so I wouldn't have a weld seen from
the front. Looks Simple......but not.
Later after being sandblasted the whole thing gets a rust patina and
clear sealer.....not "Furniture Design"- but what one needs to do, to pay rent!
; D
Brackets for the Overhead electrical cable support have been hung on the poles from Seaford to Seaford Meadows
Bracketing exposures to determine EV for an ISO test. This EV was chosen for the reciprocal exposures that were made (see following images)
The ever fascinating strength created by structure is demonstrated in these Z brackets. Cheap too. Less than $2 a piece, but I got four at a garage sale for about that. They are not adjustable but are spaced for enough height for banker's boxes. I've used them inside a closet but much harder to install in such a tight space and it's easiest if they are mounted to studs. Not quite pretty enough for much more than a garage.
I put up three shelves in an hour with 1/2" screws. Then another 20 minutes to adjust because I didn't make sure to check that they were all level for each shelf and not just the top one. Bifold doors make great shelves. Lower shelf also a door left over from closet project. I'm keeping my mother organized in exchange for use of the space.
Now that the wood is glued together, mark out where to drill the angle brackets, they need to be evenly spaced.