View allAll Photos Tagged fabricator
When stock sizes do not meet your design specifications, API has the ability to design and manufacture a custom sized container. Whether empty, lined, or with a custom foam insert, fabricated containers provide an alternative solution to your packaging needs.
Silver wick, that you can light. It burns for about 5-8 minutes. It has a brass-silver funnel to fill it up with alcohol, and a piece of thread as a wick. And a red string with silver catch.
Tha bottom of the piece is casted silver with an etched ribbed ornament. The top part is fabricated.
Weight: 12.3 g
The length of the wick is 36.5 mm
Fabricated copper tubes with kiln soldered copper clay caps with matching pedant caps and clasp. 2nd project in the book proposal.
This is the Central Fabricators building, an old warehouse on the block between Central Avenue, Poplar Street, John Street, and Livingston Street that is cut through by Kuners Alley and Bard Alley. Constructed in the late 19th Century, the late Victorian Industrial Building has had several extensions over the years, and though the windows have been filled in with concrete masonry, the building remains interesting and occupied by a metalworking company. Today, though it sits in a part of the West End eroded by industrial uses, the building does contain some redevelopment potential and value, and would make an interesting piece of an extension of the increasing vibrancy of nearby Over-the-Rhine.
This house was pre fabricated in Sweden and shipped around South America to be built in Sonoma in the 1850s. Its first occupant was Joe Hooker, an Army officer posted in Sonoma at the time, later infamously known as the general responsible for one of the biggest Northern losses in the Civil War, the Battle of Chancellorsville. #sonoma #oldhouselove
Fabricated from steel from scratch by retired ex Preston Bus bodyshop foreman and then chromed and fitted in place of the fibreglass one fitted in service by Ribble
Guemes Channel. Curtis Wharf. "ExxonMobil Alaska contracted with Haskell Corporation to fabricate a diesel storage facility for their Pt. Thomson development on Alaska’s north-slope. The project involves assembling four large diesel storage tanks, associated pumps, piping and controls on three separate modules. The work in Anacortes is slated to be completed in June of 2013 in time for a schedule sea-lift to Alaska. Point Thomson, which lies near the western edge of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, 60 miles east of Prudhoe Bay, is the world’s highest-pressure gas cycling project. It holds an estimated 8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas – about 25 percent of the North Slope’s proven gas resources – and about 200 million barrels of condensate. Cycling is a process of producing natural gas, stripping out the condensate liquids, re-pressuring the gas and then re-injecting it back into the reservoir. It’s never been done before with temperatures and pressures as extreme as they are at Point Thomson."
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I fabricated a 6 v battery... and guess what... it works! The Yashica Electro 35 GSN aperture priority rangefinder works!!! WHOOPIE! YAY! I'm a genius! I'm THE Genius ... I'm THE SUPER GENIUS...
Okay thats enough... 2000 people have probably done something like this or even better before, but hey... I did it... surpassing my own expectations!
Fabricated Panel Sign, Painted a Custom Color, with Raised Brushed Steel Fabricated Letters Applied to Face.
Erdmann Ltd, Welders & Fabricators, Tower St, Hull, 1981
Erdmann Ltd advertised themselves on the board as welders, fabricators, burners, turners and were on Tower St, probably where the Royal Mail site now is. I can find no record of them as a limited company.
After fabricating the right side door post brace it was a simple matter to duplicate it for the left side. The door post is not straight up and down nor side to side so the brace had to be shaped to follow the contour while clearing the hinge. The hinge mounts to the door post but also needs a support for the other end so some “U” shaped brackets were made to bolt to both areas.
Fabricated steel tank lifting instructions.
Canon FTb
FD 50mm f/1.8 SC
Ilford FP4 Plus @ EI 100
Kodak Microdol X, 1+3, 23:00 @ 20°C
Roll 36, Frame 6
Bill Marcotte fabricates a set of "bug eye" number boards for the north end of Lehigh Valley 211. Photo by Jeremy Tuke
This gives a better look at the wonderful face done by ingeniouslycreative. ingeniouslycreative.blogspot.com/
The owner had a severe lack of storage for household items, as well as no display options for objects collected from his worldwide travels.The large bookshelf serves as both an art piece in itself and a functional storage/display system. 17 sheets of 3/4″ birch plywood were then CNC milled to notch together and form the undulating, gridded mass.
The brace was quite difficult to fabricate, not only to get the curve around the blade correct but also to get the angles correct when seen side on. The mudguard blade is a fibreglass item I picked up at the Stafford classic mechanics show in October 2011 I think originally intended for a Manx Norton.
Roy Fox Lichtenstein (1923 – 1997) was an American pop artist.
During the 1960s, along with Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, and James Rosenquist among others, he became a leading figure in the new art movement. His work defined the premise of pop art through parody.
Inspired by comic strips, Lichtenstein produced precise compositions that documented while they parodied, often in a tongue-in-cheek manner.
His work was influenced by popular advertising and the comic book style. His artwork was considered to be "disruptive". He described pop art as "not 'American' painting but actually industrial painting".
Per the NGA website:
"Roy Lichtenstein may be best known for his 1960s pop art paintings based on advertisements and comic strips, yet he also produced a significant body of sculpture, including large-scale works designed for the outdoors.
'House I' incorporates the hallmarks of the artist's style: crisp, elemental forms, heavy black outlines, and a palette based on primary colors.
Whereas most of the artist's sculpture approximates freestanding paintings in relief rather than volumetric structures in the round, some of his late sculpture, such as House I, exploits the illusionistic effects of a third dimension.
The side of the house seems to project toward the viewer while actually receding into space. As a result, the object appears to move as you move past it. This intentionally plays with the laws of parallax, which govern the perspective of an observer moving past a fixed scene."
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