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Old architectural pieces being sold at a tag sale.. there were a lot more and some that had been cut off and made into shelves for the wall. Apparently the lady who owned the house collected them, but I sure hope these didn't come off the house.. what a tragedy if they were sold and somebody who moved in wanted to put them back on the house @_@
The remnants seem to be rectangular rubber/cork gaskets placed between the brackets and signal housings. The yellow paint that was coated onto the bottoms of the bracket flanges stayed behind as well.
Getting brackets to hold the pieces of wood together for the desk I was making for Darren's office. Another trip to Lowe's.
Polyporus squamosus or Dryad's Saddle - I think, a type of bracket fungus. I found on a rotting ash stump, but the tree canopy made it difficult to get a good image.
The raw bracket. It is made out of 3/8" Thick 6061-T6 plate that was 4" wide. I cut out a sample out of cardboard, hit it with the plasma cutter, and a ton of belt sanding! The original part was more half moon shaped, but the Edelbrock pump had a bump that needed it to be cut out a bit. Check out www.gtsparkplugs.com for more information
the small companion in this sculpture is a horse-headed dwarf. The presence of iconographically specific ganas, together with the vegetal settings behind the couples, seems to me represent Yakshas.
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Bracket fungus "fruiting bodies" in great abundance on decaying tree trunks. Near the Braid Burn, Hermitage of Braid, Edinburgh, Scotland.
A side on view of a rather large (30cm across) bracket fungi seen on Coopers Hill. The thing that struck me most about this was the dichotomy between top and bottom.
I beleive this may be Blushing Bracket (Daedaleopsis confragosa) but fungi is not something I deal with very often.
Lots of fungus about at The Lodge today. Some had been labelled by RSPB staff, and some I've not managed to identify.
This looked like turkey tail fungus, but it was huge, possibly measuring 18" across.
RSPB Reserve at The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire UK.