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(Swedish: Forsviks Bruk) The Worker's lodge, then 23 rooms (built in 1861). Nowadays a youth hostel. The traditional red paint contains pigment from the copper-mine in Falun, Dalecarlia.
600 years of industrial history: In 1410 Cecilia Jonsdotter Roos donated the Forsvik farm to the convent in Vadstena and when the monastery took it over there was already a flour mill on the farm.
The buildings in the factory area are listed buildings (Swedish: byggnadsminnen) and enjoy the strongest legal cultural and historical protection available.
www.forsviksbruk.se/en/industrial-societys-cultural-herit... (website also in English and German)
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This is a collaboration between BrickJonas and me
© 2016 - BrickJonas - Gabriele Zannotti
This former shoe factory in Northampton dates from the 1870s. It finally closed its doors after 120 years of trading in 1995 and has been empty ever since.
Permission was obtained to photograph this building.
processing some older photo's before my photoshop subscription ends...don't know if i'm gonna bother renewing it since the latest version is windows 10 only and my computer is still on w7
Ladder at a factory in Berlin, Germany.
As a reminder, keep in mind that this picture is available only for non-commercial use and that visible attribution is required. If you'd like to use this photo outside these terms, please contact me ahead of time to arrange for a paid license.
Protected with PIXSY Friendly Copyright Management.
Explored 08/15/14.
Factory Bridge, also known as Horsham Bridge, is a historic wooden covered bridge in White Deer Township, Union County, Pennsylvania. It is a 60-foot-long (18 m), King and Queen truss bridge, constructed in 1880, and repaired in 1954 and 1976. It crosses the White Deer Creek.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
Factory Light
For the Togs: Nikon D810 with 70-200 f/2.8 lens.
Profoto AcuteB2 battery generator with Acute head outside of window shooting through the glass reflected with Profoto Medium Umbrella Deep (silver).
In the second half of the nineteenth century, the potato flour industry in the province of Groningen was concentrated mainly in the fen colonies. Built in 1916, this cooperative potato flour mill was one of the last to be established in the area. After the factory closed in 1981, the site and buildings were used by various small businesses. Besides the offices, the original boiler house with chimney and factory hall are still standing. The building has been empty since 1999.
Factory Butte (Wayne County, Utah).
Es una formación geológica en Utah formada por múltiples tipos de rocas, incluida la roca Mancos, la arenisca de Mesa Verde y la arenisca de Muley Canyon.
Estas rocas registran la existencia de un mar interior que cubría gran parte de Utah hace unos 90 millones de años.
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Built in 1886 as a button factory this building in Waterloo, Ontario is now an art center named Button Factory Arts.
Fence of the Bulova Condos, an apartment house,
Sag Harbor, Long Island, New York. The building was
the former Fahys (later Bulova) Watchcase Factory
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The Fahys Company, started by Joseph Fahys (1832 – 1915),
was the largest manufacturer of watchcases in the United States.
-- Wikipedia
Kidwelly Brick Works to the north of Kidwelly station was opened c.1858 by William Edwards of Swansea. This site ceased operation in c.1903. A new works was built to the south of of the railway station by Alderman Daniel Stephens which opened in 1903. Stephens worked silica from Mynydd-y-Garreg and this was brought into the works via train. Up to 1927 the firm was known as Stephens & Co, but later as Beynon Davies Civils Ltd.
These photographs, taken in March 2017, showcase the building as it stands today.
Inspiration for the framing of the shots came from the 1975 New Topographics exhibition.
Factory Butte (Wayne County, Utah).
Es una formación geológica en Utah formada por múltiples tipos de rocas, incluida la roca Mancos, la arenisca de Mesa Verde y la arenisca de Muley Canyon.
Estas rocas registran la existencia de un mar interior que cubría gran parte de Utah hace unos 90 millones de años.
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This old factory in Nottingham city has been left derelict for years after a fire gutted it. Whoever owns it probably doesn't have the money to demolish it or restore it as accommodation. Shame.
Okay this isn't really a factory or a fire. I liked the way the metal wine rack looked with my orange lamp as a background.
My Photoshop actions and Lightroom presets on Creative Market
Factory Girl series
model: Ksu Govorukhina
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Although this is a staged photo, it shows what I have been up to minus the mess during the actual reconstruction of a sawmill. This sawmill started off as a Pola factory kit imported by Atlas over 40 years ago. The wall were originally brick with an opening on both ends for freight cars, and it had a brick out building with a tall brick smoke chimney. If you are on older modeler, you probably built one.
After about 15 years, to Americanize the building, I replaced the walls with corrugated sheet metal from Campbell Scale Models and kept the same windows and some of the internal supports. I also replaced the plastic simulated sheet metal roof with more aluminum roofing glued to sheet plastic. Unfortunately, the sheet styrene I first used with the roof sections was too thin to offer good support, and to make matter worse, I glued it with Walther's Goo. I HATE that cursed stuff! It stinks, it's messy, and it does not hold. OK, the upper roof held together, but the lower roofs sagged many scale feet and looked horrible.
The sad, beat up, old factory sat in a storage box for three years after my new layout was up and running, and other old buildings had been refurbished. I needed an American style sawmill rather than the two European style sawmills that Pola offered in the 1960's and imported by Atlas and later by Model Power. Walthers produced a sawmill first in HO, then N scale that was part of a sawmill-lumber yard-paper mill complex featured in a fabulous ad in the January 1997 Model Railroader and reviewed in the August 1997 issue.
I did not copy but drew my inspiration from the Walthers sawmill kit which is just about the same size as my old Pola factory. With nothing to lose, I ripped off the old lower roof sections and pulled off the real aluminum roofing material. Next I cut some sub-roof sections from thicker (0.040") sheet styrene from Evergreen Scale Models and bonded the Campbell roofing with J B Weld epoxy instead of that nasty Goo. The same sheet also forms the new concrete floor of the sawmill. To reinforce the building I made vertical supports of ESM styrene strips 0.040" thick and 1/4." I use the same strip stock for making internal alignment keys to position removable buildings from their bases, shore up poor building wall joints from the inside, and as a horizontal tab to keep custom made roof sections from slipping off their walls.
I do most of my cutting on the plastic cutting board originally made for sewing and smaller, more precise cuts on the adjustable Dupli-Cutter cutting jig. These days I must use an Opti-Visor to see what I'm doing, and an Ott-Lite shows me the way. When I'm not using the Ott-Lite for model work, I use it for doing my nails.
Would a factory girl dress like this? Yes! I used to supervise a group of girls in a semiconductor wafer fab facility. Some girls always dressed pretty and wore full makeup, even in a factory. Some never did, and most were in between. Quite often, the girls on my second shift would hit the clubs immediately after they left at 11 pm, and some third shift girls came to work straight from the clubs.