View allAll Photos Tagged deco
This is the entrance to Turbine hall 'A', with the front desk greeting people at Battersea power station.
Here showing its industrial interior, and those massive Art Deco windows.
Mate 20 Pro- Leica lens
Photographic Art by Hal Halli
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Vienna cemetary:
March 2005. this church has amazing interior, all art deco on the walls and beautifully kept.
New additions to the living space from May's Deco(c)rate:
MudHoney James Console
MudHoney James Lamp w cord
.:revival:. nordic chair
Couch New England CHEZ MOI
Di'Cor Simone Indoor Planter
Di'Cor Simone Book Pile
:CP: Kaye Pendant Light
See them? I know you can barely pick them out, my only excuse is that my inventory is a sinking ship. This is as minimal as i go... so much for the Deco(c)rate theme of this month - Minimalism! Ha!
Beulah Street, Harrogate
This photo is interesting because the doors look like they (maybe) are the originals installed in 1933. I don't know why I didn't notice them before. Possibly they had been boarded up until recently.
The building used to be a Burton Menswear store. The inscription on the stone at the bottom left reads "This stone laid by Stanley Edward Burton 1933".
Stanley Edward was the son of Sir Montague Burton.
You see this color on classics regularly enough, and I always like it. Something about this deep plum is very glam.
A fine example of a modern apartment block in Art Deco style, this building can be found on the far northern end of the esplanade in Frinton-on-Sea. The apartments are large - there's only eight.
Seen in glorious sunshine on New Year's Eve, the image does not give any sense of the sharp wind blowing in from the North Sea...
Although it appears to be an 1930s building, it is not! It appeared recently - GoogleEarth's imagery is a bit limited for Frinton but shows it apparently completed on 31 Dec 2009, but a completely different building is on the site in the next-earliest imagery of 6 Nov 2006...
The architects were Tim Snow Architects Ltd and the chartered building surveyors Shore Engineering list it as one of their projects.
Fountainbridge Library, Dundee Street, Edinburgh.
Constructed in 1937-40 by John A W Grant, this grand-looking public building comprises both art deco and art nouveau stylings in its design. The library replaced an early books repository dating from the 19th century and stands out prominently among the surrounding Victorian tenements of Fountainbridge.
The home of our local newspaper, established in 1938 with the merger of The Daily Times and the Wairarapa Age newspapers.
Outtake for Week 16 of 52 Weeks - Vanishing Point.