View allAll Photos Tagged bricks
I made this because the kooberz ghost could fit a saber scorpion elite in it. So i had an idea to build one to accommodate the elite. This is completely my design so if your gonna use it u have to give me credit.
Fenestration on the interesting mid-century brick facade of the former Sacred Heart Convent (c. 1963) at East 5th and Mendota Streets on St. Paul's East Side.
While sorting my CA bricks, I came across these odd bricks. On the left, you can see the old logo, on the right the new logo. Yet both of these bricks are made from CA!
Old red bricks, Castlemaine, Victoria
Nokia's second brick style mobile phone from the late 80s. See 80s Mobile phones for more details.
These phones set new standards in design and helped to launch Nokia as a leader in mobile communications.
The black rocks are used widely in construction, as an available material for building and as an accent.
Picture taken with Sony Alpha 700 Camera and Carl Zeiss Vario-Sonnar T* DT 16-80 F3.5-4.5 ZA Zoom Lens at 60mm focal length, F/4.5 and 1/250 sec exposure time. ISO speed set at 400. Metering Mode Pattern.
saw this in one of my classes. maybe someone thought writing Jesus' name on the brick would help them on a test? oh, lipscomb. =)
Martinsville, IN. This was the first alignment of what is now State Road 39 near the west fork of the White River on Martinsville's northwest side. Don't cite this as an authoritative source, but my reading over the past couple years suggests that Martinsville had a brick industry in the early 1900s, and that bricks were laid on the Dixie Highway (now SR 37) near Martinsville in about 1915, so I want to think that these bricks went in at about the same time.
Remains of the old brick factory at Claybank National Historic Site. The factory made these yellowish-red bricks from near the turn of the 19th century until 1989. Much of the process was still somewhat done by hand. I would love to know which of the countless civic and municipal buildings in southern Saskatchewan were constructed from Claybank brick. It's a fascinating place to visit as it was just as if the owners turned off the lights and handed the keys to the federal government. It's in "as is" condition.
Claybank, Saskatchewan
The word "moccasin," designating sewn (utilitarian or elaborately decorated) footwear originated from the Powhatan language, though it is now used nearly universally to describe soft shoes created by, or in the style of, the Indigenous peoples of North America. Moccasins, aka "mocs," are always on display at powwows. Especially in the case of the Plains tribes, there's nothing plain about their powwow regalia. Women's mocs especially are often spectacularly beaded, and consist of the combination of a shoes and matched legging pieces around the calf. Here are glimpses of a few viewed at the 47th Annual Montana State University American Indian Council Powwow, March 31-April 1, 2023