View allAll Photos Tagged displaycase
I realized that if this stone toppled, it would most likely crash through the shelf it is on as well as the three shelves below it, breaking items as it fell. I did the shake test and it could probably withstand a 5.0 earthquake, but for extra protection I held it against the glass with some 26 gage wire and two suction cup glass hangars.
Image from this website: www.dlfaquifer.org/home
Check out that back lit frame, glass display case, and the row of bullet cone lights! WOOO!
I was commissioned to make three old museum-style show cases by a Brighton artist. I used traditional three-way mitre joints and rebated the glass into place on construction.
The wood is sapele and the finish is French polish.
book, diary, display case.
Bolger Center, business, Potomac, Maryland.
... Read my blog at http://ClintJCL.wordpress.com.
boston, massachusetts
january 1971
downtown department store, unidentified
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
I told my husband I wanted the "distressed" look. I choose a soft candle light cream color. When we had our old lead painted windows replaced this summer, we saved the 100 year old metal hardware parts (handles and locks). The hutch has a nice drawer to it that had no handles, so I had my hubby add 2 that were from the old windows. After a couple coats paint, some sanding and scuffing of sorts, a few layers of tung oil, I have one newly refinished hutch to store my goodies.
This is a tabletop charging station we designed and built for Minotaur Mazes in Seattle. It is designed to display handheld GPS units and charges them when not in use. The curved lid closes and locks to keep the GPS units secure.
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.
kyoto, japan
fall 1972
restaurant display
(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
This is the "Napkin Sketch" that was provided to us by our client. We have no problem working from a drawing as simple as this, and sometimes we even prefer to! This was for a tabletop charging station we designed and built for Minotaur Mazes in Seattle. It is designed to display handheld GPS units and charges them when not in use. The curved lid closes and locks to keep the GPS units secure.
Display Case: Perfect For Nendoroids & Funko Pop! (Daiso) Japan
*Does NOT fit all Funko Pop! figures
After the Watergate scandal and the exposure of the White House plumbers, who would have ever thought that we could be nostalgic for Richard Nixon? Thinking about it, this represents one of the last times that there were relatively clear villains and heroes, and "simple" right and wrong issues. Fear was there, but more under wraps, and not exploited to the extremes used by the Administration today. And certainly conspiracy theories held by the Administration were so few, unlike the present Administration, using a WMD approach to stomping out dissent by vast numbers of people disappearing into the Void of the Patriot Act and Homeland Security.
Walker Art Center Library Display Case featuring Mail Art from The Rosemary Furtak Artist Book Collection.
Designed by Margit Wilson, January 2014.
L-R: Art for um, Buster Cleveland, 1993-1998. Altered and collaged reproductions of Art Forum covers. Addressed to Walker Art Center.
[100 boots], Eleanor Antin, 1971-1973. Series of postcards depicting 100 black rubber boots in various situations. Addressed to Martin Friedman, Walker Art Center. Postkarten, Joseph Beuys, Edition Staeck, circa 1980s. Representation of a postcard on wood block. Filpostkarte, Joesph Beuys, Edition Staeck, circa 1980s. Representation of a postcard on felt block. Artists Books, Collaborative publication by students from Pratt Institute with Brooklyn Museum of Art, 2000. Mixed media housed in plastic case. Original photograph of Brooklyn setting by Amy Upton.