View allAll Photos Tagged cladding

for someone who likes to cook, i'm just beginning to get nice cookware for myself. i'm slowly trying to replace the worn out teflon ones and cheap ikea ones.

 

i got this stock pot for super insane cheap! i doubt i'd pay for this regular price.

Cladding being installed on the Financial tower in district 1.

Strobist bootcamp 1, delayed around a year

 

Strobist: 580ex 1/16th power camera right through umbrella, white posterboard reflector bottom of frame. 580ex inside the pot, 1/32nd power.

 

The strange thing to me is that while the focus isn't great, the shadow along the handle makes the focus look much worse.

Built in 1938, this Art Moderne and Mediterranean Revival-style building was designed by John J. Flad to house the Madison Catholic Club, which included the local chapter of the Knights of Columbus. The building is clad in red brick with a red terra cotta tile side gable roof and front gable, gable parapets, a band of quarry tile below the sill of the second-story windows, six-over-six, nine-over-nine, and two-over-two double-hung windows, a central entrance door on the first floor with an arched fanlight transom and decorative trim surround, stone belt coursing at the header of the second story windows, a circular opening in the front gable, a concrete foundation, contemporary lampposts flanking the front entrance door, and chimneys on the side facades. The building has been preserved, and now serves as a podium for the contemporary mid-rise Hilton Madison Monona Terrace Hotel that was built behind it in the 1990s.

Sangla ,Himachal Pradesh, India.

The Beaver

 

Benched by P. in Calgary, AB.

Quite a makeover here. All vestiges of the victorian heritage have been lost.

Photos de la Basilique Saint-Denis, nécropole des Rois de France.

© CLAD / THE FARM

Mai 2019

AGENCE : www.thefarmcom.io

On the way to Over The Air, St John's Church, Hoxton, 25th September 2015. Ref: D1391-047

Hangar 1 is finally getting a new skin put on its frame!

I'm amazed the MDF wall panels are untainted by tags and graffiti. Maybe if they clad all the trains and cuttings with the same they would solve that problem? ;-)

Pattern Testing for Wondermommy skantly clad E Book pattern found here shop.wondermommy.net

Light reflecting off the bottom of a stainless steel All Clad cooking pot.

 

This is the handle out of focus.

 

See more at Photowalking Colorado.

Dhankar Gompa, Himachal Pradesh, India

 

Dhankar Gompa (also Dankhar, Drangkhar or Dhangkar Gompa; Brang-mkhar or Grang-mkhar) is a village and also a Gompa, a Buddhist temple in the district of Lahaul and Spiti in India. It is situated at an elevation of 3,894 metres (12,774 feet) in the Spiti Valley above Dhankar Village, between the towns of Kaza and Tabo. The complex is built on a 1000-foot (300-metre) high spur overlooking the confluence of the Spiti and Pin Rivers - one of the world's most spectacular settings for a gompa. Dhang or dang means cliff, and kar or khar means fort. Hence Dhangkar means fort on a cliff.

 

Dhankar, like Key Monastery and Tangyud Monastery in Spiti, and Thiksey, Likir and Rangdum monasteries in Ladakh, was built as a fort monastery on the Central Tibetan pattern. It was reported to have had 90 monks in 1855.

Cladding has begun - held up by a big steel pipe.

Detail on the stone clad cottages in Fermyn Woods. The story behind these pictures is on our blog at Inversion Layer.

 

Richard Woods Stone Clad Cottages curated by Fermynwoods Contempoary Art Gallery, nr Brigstock, Northamptonshire.

This is the first time I've ever seen a skeleton wearing a bikini! She seems to have a drink in her hand to keep her hydrated. Huh?

Looking at the new cladding on the main Birmingham Library through the old cast iron railings.

Iron Clad Beetle - (Zopherus haldemani)

 

Metal sided building reflected in evening sun.

Close up of the cladding on the wall inside the church

 

Location: Makara, Wellington, New Zealand

 

© Gordon Anderson

Built in 1893-1895, this Flemish Renaissance Revival-style building was designed by Henry C. Koch and Company to serve as Milwaukee City Hall, and was the city’s tallest building, as well as one of the tallest buildings in the world, upon its completion. The building stands 15 stories and 353 feet (108 meters) tall, and was the tallest building in Milwaukee and the state of Wisconsin until 1973, when the First Wisconsin Center (now known as the US Bank Center) was completed. The building is clad in orange brick with a stone base, stone trim, one-over-one windows with transoms, a vaulted entrance porch with arched openings, arched bays, carved relief panels at the spandrels, stone spandrels, a tower at the south end of the building with an open belfry, flemish renaissance-style gables at the clock faces of the tower, a hipped roof atop the tower with a cylindrical lantern with a domed roof, cornices with modillions, wall dormers, a hipped roof, a fire escape mounted to the east side of the building, and a lantern at the north end of the building. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. The building today remains in use as Milwaukee City Hall.

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