View allAll Photos Tagged flatware
Flatware for every course of your meal:
1- Salad/Dessert fork
2- Dinner Fork
3- Serving Fork
4- Serving Spoon
5- Dinner Knife
6- Teaspoon
7- Soup Spoon
8- Demitasse Spoon
9- Oyster Fork
10- Butter Spreader
11- Iced Tea Spoon
I've always wanted to try to use gels on my flash but never have. Today I was trying to mimic an idea a saw in a photography book and it had a blue tint to the lighting. I just taped the blue gel over my flash with another diffusing gel and fired away. Also had a 2nd flash pointed at the white backgound to wash out some of the blue that was being cast on the background. I have a lot of little blown out highlights but they don't bother me too much. I'd like to try this again in a light tent.
This is one of the most complete sets of flatware I have ever seen and in rarely used condition. It's a full service for 12. Aside from the place settings in this photo there are 15 serving pieces.
www.etsy.com/listing/156985330/oneida-flatware-gold-beeth...
Joanne has been collecting USN flatware for a long time. She recently got these eight spoons and a nice note from the PO that they were from her Grandfather who obtained them from the USS North Carolina in WWII.
Joannes father was on the USS Franklin during the War.
During a rare stop for breakfast out on a weekday, I took this photo because I liked the pattern on this flatware. And in reviewing my photos for the past few days, i realized they are pretty shiny, too!
ANSH123: 19. Shiny
Silver plate spoon handle with an enameled flower (glass on copper) pinned in place by a sterling rivet.
It reads 'Overcome your limits Do great things'
Dangerously seductive culture jamming and a sensibility that embraces tacky displays of near useless items such as a plastic flatware chandelier. Stuff made from disposables that should never exist in the first place so why absolve it by finding a use for it? Why devote energy to making items that end up being free advertizing for commercial products and their packaging? Too many of the items are about copying trendy styles that will themselves be disposable in a year.
Flashes of brilliance with high marks for presentation, but from the whole book only one or two ideas are actually worthy - the faux Eames bookshelf made from old drawers and some angle iron is one of them and picture frames made fron old hardback book covers. To be fair, they do give out the facts about resource use and how these materials are made. Plus they also have some fun items that didn't work out like the lounge chair made of empty plastic bottles.
I wish more from what could be an inspiring treatise for the DIY arena. As it is, it is junk food inspiration.