View allAll Photos Tagged elevator
This is Portland's new Hyatt Regency. The cladding in the elevator lobby is gorgeous, in shades of blue, white and yellow. I'd like to think it's real stone. What do you think?
The disgraced Gordon Sondland had the project tied up in litigation for years. The shamless bastard [n.b. this is statement of opinion - I'm not claiming his parents were unmarried at the time of his conception or birth] then offered to settle his suit providing he got the right to manage the hotel.
Now he's gotten his comeuppance. Portland ain't Brussels, is it, Gordon?
Sunset light in an old factory giving a supernatural impression of the scene. I tryed to make the most of a 10-24mm lense in order to create a nice perspective,
Let me know your opinion ! Feel free to comment & share !
Music to listen to : Chamillionaire - Evening news : www.youtube.com/watch?v=UruJKq5kaUM
Soft evening light on an abandoned grain elevator left to the elements. Western Montana, May 2021
Portra 160 4x5, 300mm lens
1/4 second at f32, no filters
Former BNSF (still with BNSF reporting marks) this geep is now an elevator switcher in Malden, Indiana. 11/11/16
The elevator shaft is seen through the decorative ironwork of an antique, but still functioning elevator at Fisher College in the Back Bay. Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
El hueco del ascensor se ve a través de la herrería decorativa de un ascensor antiguo, pero aún funcionando, en el Fisher College de Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts, EE. UU.
"We movin on up in da world like elevators." ― Outkast
Photographer & Model: Giselle Chauveau ― Musical Inspiration
ILS 1378 moves a cut of loaded hoppers from a track at Elevator M in Superior's East End. The laker American Victory remains in extended layup in the elevator slip (the facility no longer ships by boats, just rail as a storage elevator).
Two long-abandoned elevators moldering away just outside the ghost town of Merricourt. The tall one is an early concrete elevator, and the other one is made of brick.
While brick was theoretically better than the tin and wood construction of many other elevators built at the same time, it seems that it was not as strong in practice.
Grain Elevator with American Flag in Meta, Missouri. Photography by Notley Hawkins. Taken with a Canon EOS R5 camera with a Canon RF70-200mm F2.8 L IS USM lens at ƒ/4.0 with a 1/2000-second exposure at ISO 50. Processed with Adobe Lightroom Classic.
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Grain elevators are a rapidly disppearing sight on the Canadian Prairies. Since 1963 the total number has dwindled from over 5000 to about 400.
Scan from slide.
Detail of sculpture representing the auspicious symbol Ru-yi
made from recycled elevator cable by Kang Muxian from Taiwan. Interesting website where you can see what it looks like whole; there's a photo of the artist where he looks like a model for one of the terracotta army in Xian.
www.widewalls.ch/artist/kang-mu-xiang/
When I posted this, I thought it was a black and white photo, then I looked at it on my phone and saw a lot of red tints - now on flickr I see a lot more colour too, strange. It is just steel. The more I look, the more colourful it is. A trick of the eye?
Today, I learned that a harmonica, played in a moving elevator, can be heard quite well on the floor I'm approaching.
A guest in that personal care home heard the music (Angels We Have Heard on High) and asked, "What's that?"
A resident was sitting in a soft chair in the lobby of that floor. She rolled her eyes. "Oh, that's our chaplain."
As I walked from the elevator and into the lobby, the guest was singing along.