View allAll Photos Tagged displaycase

Pilot Metropolitan fountain pen in the display case with cartridge and open lid. Read my full review of the Pilot Metropolitan.

Even more interesting than this jacket were some of the early onstage costumes e.g. Angus Young's school uniform. They were some of the tiniest men's clothes I have ever seen.

 

"AC/DC: Australia's Family Jewels" exhibition opening @ the Western Australian Museum.

 

Perth, Western Australia.

Creator: Unidentified

 

Location: Brisbane, Queensland

 

Description: First prize, Fassifern District exhibition at Brisbane Exhibition grounds.

 

View this page at the State Library of Queensland: hdl.handle.net/10462/deriv/55838

 

Information about State Library of Queensland’s collection: pictureqld.slq.qld.gov.au/

From the lobby of the Country Bear Theater at Tokyo Disneyland.

 

This display case depicts such as items as a photograph of a bear playing a violine, a fiddle and a bow, letters/notes from some of the cast and lyrics/sheet music for some of the songs performed in the show.

 

Andy always put together a dizzying array of species in a nice compact case. Great stuff!

Software: Photoshop CS5, Photomatix, Nik Viveza, Topaz Adjust, Topaz Detail, Topaz DeNoise 5, Topaz ReMask

From the lobby of the Country Bear Theater at Tokyo Disneyland.

 

This display case depicts such as items as a photograph of a bear playing a violine, a fiddle and a bow, letters/notes from some of the cast and lyrics/sheet music for some of the songs performed in the show.

 

Janice and our son, John, check out a display case.

Clusters of board magnets in empty displays in front of the Štefánik Observatory.

 

Prague-Petřín, Czech Republic

Kelmscott Manor

 

A limestone manor house in the Cotswolds village of Kelmscott, in Oxfordshire. It dates from around 1570, with a late 17th-century wing.

 

It was the country home of the writer, designer and socialist William Morris from 1871 until his death in 1896.

 

When Morris first saw the Manor in 1871, he was delighted by this 'loveliest haunt of ancient peace' and signed a joint lease for the property with his friend and colleague Dante Gabriel Rossetti, the Pre-Raphaelite artist.

 

Morris drew great inspiration from the unspoilt authenticity of the house's architecture and craftsmanship, and its organic relationship with its setting, especially its garden

 

After his death, his wife Jane purchased the house, and his daughter, May, spent much of her adult life here.

 

The Manor contains an outstanding collection of the possessions and works of Morris, as well as of his family and associates including William Benson, Edward Burne-Jones, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Philip Webb.

 

The collection includes furniture, original textiles, pictures and paintings, carpets, ceramics and metalwork.

 

The Old Hall.

 

Originally used as a Dining Hall. The Morrises used it first as a sitting room and from 1889 as a dining room.

 

Corner display cupboard contains work by Morris and his friends.

 

www.sal.org.uk/kelmscott-manor

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelmscott_Manor

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Morris

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Morris

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Morris

Part of what made my 2009 trip to Japan so amazing was having so many chances to meet so many of my Flickr contacts. I was lucky enough to get to meet Bob twice while I was in Osaka. The first time with Jim-san and Tetsu at Expo Commemoration Park and then a few days later to wander around and shoot in Kyoto and Osaka.

 

Before Bob and I capped off our lengthy day with random haircuts in Namba, we took a sidetrip to the Olympus Plaza. Bob has exhibited his photography here, has a great relationship with the staff, and I was really blown away by how kind and friendly everyone working there was. The entire line-up of Olympus glass was present in this display case, and I was given the opportunity to play with whatever interested me while I was there. (I also found out that the flip-out LCD on my E-3 is broken, but that's another story!)

 

So, yeah, the Zuiko Digital 8mm fisheye is now officially next on my must-purchase list. Along with the 50mm f/2.0 macro and the 50-200mm SWD. So many lenses, so little time! And thanks again for a totally awesome day, Bob! Olympus Plaza, Chuo-ku, Osaka. October 14, 2009.

hanoi, vietnam

1995

 

local men

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Mummies of Ancient Eggypt: Rediscovering 6 Lives

 

From July 14 to October 26, the CaixaForum Madrid cultural space hostsed an exhibition made up of a collection of objects on loan from the British Museum in London, which explores the idea of ​​mummification and analyzes the testimony of six people who lived in the Ancient Egypt.

 

This sample contains six mummies of people who lived between 900 and 150 BC. C. in Egypt. Thus, through a non-invasive investigation carried out with the most modern technology, the discoveries that have been achieved by the hand of these specimens are exhibited.

 

Through scientific and historical evidence, it is possible to observe what life was like in these lands, the tools and techniques used for mummification, the medicinal recipes with which they were cured, the diet of those people, cosmetics and adornments, music, cultural exchanges and even the role of women and children in the Egypt of the pharaohs.

 

Mummification became a common practice in ancient Egypt, believing that the body had to be preserved in order to reach the afterlife. For them death was just the beginning and this represented the separation between the body and the soul.

 

The first mummies are dated between 4000 and 3000 BC. C. and it is thought that this practice could have come from accidentally unearthing some corpses, which had dried due to the heat of the desert. By keeping much of their physical appearance, they tried to manually mimic this preservation. In this way, they dried the deceased by extracting the viscera from the body and then dehydrated them with natron and embalmed them.

   

Description: At the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, Saint Louis, MO, 1904, the Bureau of American Ethnology exhibit prepared under the auspices of the Smithsonian Institution and National Museum. The Smithsonian coordinated all of the U.S. Government exhibits and prepared a display on its activities and collections for the exposition.

 

Creator/Photographer: Unidentified photographer

 

Medium: Black and white photographic print

 

Dimensions: 8 in x 10 in

 

Date: 1904

 

Repository: Smithsonian Institution Archives

 

Accession number: 16425

Which one looks good to you? Japan.

Museo Soumaya (Soumaya Museum).

Plaza Carso.

Mexico City.

I took these Photos on February 2, 2008 during a Florida East Coast Railway Society sponsored two day Bus Tour of the Florida Keys. They show the History of the Building of the Florida East Coast Railway Key West Extension, in Display cases in the Caboose at 82616 US Route 1, in Islamorada on Upper Matecumbe Key in the Florida Keys.

 

Within the three Display Cases are Photos, Drawings, Diagrams and Short Paragraphs describing the History of the Building and Operation of the FEC Key West Extension.

 

The tittle of this Poster is: "The Early Settlers Of Upper Matecumbe Key".

 

DISCLAIMER: These posters were in poor shape with serious fading, stains and water marks. I did my best to optimize the Contrast, Color Saturation and Sharpness, however the posters are only partially readable.

kyoto, japan

fall 1972

 

candid, department store

(damaged negative)

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Antique Shop - Asheville, NC

Gourd Art Exhibit -- Fayme Harper, Artist

BIG Sale on Jan. 12 & 13! We need to make room to unpack more stuff from our backroom & warehouse!

 

Visit our web page here: www.bagtheweb.com/b/E7Kxc0

 

*** HUGE Sale*** Estate/Inventory ...

 

Items need to find a new home, Antiques, collectibles, china cabinets, dressers, vanities , night stands, lamps, chairs, pictures, showcases, display cases, all types of smalls , too numerous to list...

 

something for everyone...bring the truck and cash ... We need the space to unpack more...

 

160 Huntington Ave N. in Castle Rock, WA 98611

 

Special Sale Hours: Sat-Sun 9-5pm ...

 

Rain or Shine Inside !!!

 

Me made the mistake of buying 2 estate sales, when we don't even have room to get out our excess stuff in our backroom and warehouse! Come help us make some room!

    

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