View allAll Photos Tagged geometricpattern

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

A decorative brick-framed window with ornate metal screening, punctuated by a no parking sign.

 

Shanghai Color Film 400

philharv3y.com

Today I wanted to show you how some of the patterns that I’ve previously shown you for ‘My pattern design of the week’ would look like as wallpapers. The patters have been slightly changed and I’ve also added a few other design elements to them where I thought the design needed a little extra work.

 

Please visit my blog at claudiaowen.wordpress.com/ or my website at claudiaowen.com/

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

This vase was hand painted with different shades of blue, turquoise, aqua and teal stained glass paints.

 

For more details about this piece, visit www.oliabseiso.com/gallery.php

 

Please contact me for permission before using any of my photos, and please remember that my designs are original creations, are protected by copyright, and may not be reproduced in any form.

Designer Geometric , Designer Toronto , Designer Canada , Geometry Fashion , Geometric Style , Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style, art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion

Universal Streetwear , Canada Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear , Toronto Streetwear Style Canada , Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Geometric Style, Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style , art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion , Universal Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear ,Toronto Streetwear , Style Canada

Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Crop Circle Clothing , God of Geometry , Designer Deco , Geometric Pattern , Sacred Styles , Sacred G Shoes , Next Dimension Design , Sacred G Style , 2012 Streetwear , Sacred G Streetwear , Sacred G Skateboards , 2013 Style , 2013 Fashion , 2012 Fashions , Art-Step , dubstep , 2012 STYLE , Deco Code , The Deco Code ...

Colorful hot air balloon as it inflates sunrise Kent International balloon classic Kent Washington State USA

  

All my photographs are copyright protected, If you wish to use my photos please contact me and we can discuss usage fees.

 

©Jim Corwin_All Rights Reserved - Contact me at jimcorwin39 [at] yahoo.com or visit my PhotoShelter site using the link Jim Corwin Photography on my Profile Page.

Tibetan monks from Drepung Loseling Monastery making sand mandala.

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

An old wooden door with Islamic geometric patterns in the old part of Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

Located on Ballarat’s Doveton Street, the former Lutheran Church was built in 1876 to the grand designs of local Ballarat architect C. D. Figgis and was constructed by Taylor & Ellis.

  

The church building is architecturally quite striking with a formal composition with elements of a Ruskinian Italian Gothic style. It features with banded brick arches, Lombardic motifs and an attenuated version of a stepped arcaded corbel table leading to the central tower. The tall blind arcading of the tower is similar to the Campanile at Venice. The tower has an arcaded corbel table with trefoil arches, above which is a parapet with quatrefoil openings surmounted by a slate clad pyramidal roof. The lower part of the building consists of more conventional elements. There are two occuli in the gable ends flanking the tower and the banded Gothic openings have nail head brick label moulds. At the base of the tower there are two entrance doors under a Gothic banded arch surrounded by cream brick nail head moulding, and an outer Scotia label mould; these continue down to a low impost height and return horizontally as a string course across the facade. Banded Gothic openings and a patterned string course at low impost height lightens the heaviness of the red brickwork. The side elevation has the same nail head and Scotia string course at impost level rising up as stilted segmental arches over the double lancet windows in each of the five bays. The combination of unusual elements in patterned relief brickwork, and the imposing superimposed Venetian Campanile combine to make this a unique church composition.

  

Designer Geometric Fashion , Designer Toronto , Designer Canada , Geometry Fashion , Geometric Style , Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style, art , art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion Universal Streetwear , Canada Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear , Toronto Streetwear Style Canada , Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Geometric Style, Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style , art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion , Universal Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear ,Toronto Streetwear , Style Canada Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Crop Circle Clothing , God of Geometry , Designer Deco , Geometric Pattern , Sacred Styles , Sacred G Shoes , Next Dimension Design , Sacred G Style , 2012 Streetwear , Sacred G Streetwear , Sacred G Skateboards , 2013 Style , 2013 Fashion , 2012 Fashions , Art-Step , dubstep , 2012 STYLE , Deco Code , The Deco Code symmetry geometrics fashionable modern bold patterns supercool urban gear geometric shoes , shoes , shoe , patterned shoes , techno for the eyes , music for the eyes , Geometric-patterns , Geometric patterns , urban fashion 2012 generation zen , gen-zen , generation-zen

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

This smart Queen Anne style brick villa in the Melbourne suburb of Travancore features a magnificent bay window with an Art Nouveau stained glass showing geometric patterns.

Leica M6 | MS-Optical-R&D Sonnetar 50mmf1.1 | Agfa APX100 | R09 One Shot (1+50)

Designer Geometric Fashion , Designer Toronto , Designer Canada , Geometry Fashion , Geometric Style , Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style, art , art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion Universal Streetwear , Canada Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear , Toronto Streetwear Style Canada , Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Geometric Style, Intergalactic Fashion , Intergalactic Style , art-step , Canadian Crop Circles , Crop Circle Fashion , Universal Streetwear , Canada Street Fashion , Canada Streetwear ,Toronto Streetwear , Style Canada Sacred Geometric , Sacred Geometrics , Sacred Geometry Clothes , Sacred Geometry Gear , Sacred Geometry Clothing , The Sacred G , Geometric Fashion , Crop Circle Clothing , God of Geometry , Designer Deco , Geometric Pattern , Sacred Styles , Sacred G Shoes , Next Dimension Design , Sacred G Style , 2012 Streetwear , Sacred G Streetwear , Sacred G Skateboards , 2013 Style , 2013 Fashion , 2012 Fashions , Art-Step , dubstep , 2012 STYLE , Deco Code , The Deco Code symmetry geometrics fashionable modern bold patterns supercool urban gear geometric shoes , shoes , shoe , patterned shoes , techno for the eyes , music for the eyes , Geometric-patterns , Geometric patterns , urban fashion 2012 generation zen , gen-zen , generation-zen

Located on Ballarat’s Doveton Street, the former Lutheran Church was built in 1876 to the grand designs of local Ballarat architect C. D. Figgis and was constructed by Taylor & Ellis.

  

The church building is architecturally quite striking with a formal composition with elements of a Ruskinian Italian Gothic style. It features with banded brick arches, Lombardic motifs and an attenuated version of a stepped arcaded corbel table leading to the central tower. The tall blind arcading of the tower is similar to the Campanile at Venice. The tower has an arcaded corbel table with trefoil arches, above which is a parapet with quatrefoil openings surmounted by a slate clad pyramidal roof. The lower part of the building consists of more conventional elements. There are two occuli in the gable ends flanking the tower and the banded Gothic openings have nail head brick label moulds. At the base of the tower there are two entrance doors under a Gothic banded arch surrounded by cream brick nail head moulding, and an outer Scotia label mould; these continue down to a low impost height and return horizontally as a string course across the facade. Banded Gothic openings and a patterned string course at low impost height lightens the heaviness of the red brickwork. The side elevation has the same nail head and Scotia string course at impost level rising up as stilted segmental arches over the double lancet windows in each of the five bays. The combination of unusual elements in patterned relief brickwork, and the imposing superimposed Venetian Campanile combine to make this a unique church composition.

  

 

Geometric , Geometric Patterns , Geometry , Patterns , crop circles , sacred geometry , Jai Deco , geometry , vinyl ,

Also for its educational mission I guess, but especially for its funny architecture, such as its large grid of beige windowlessness (seen here).

 

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In Long Island City, Queens, on September 3rd, 2018, Building E (the "Annex Building" or "East Building") of LaGuardia Community College, as viewed from the southeast corner of 47th Avenue and 31st Place.

 

The building was formerly the Equitable Bag Company, remodeled/converted by architects Warner, Burns, Toan & Lunde from 1989 to 1992 (dates according to page 61 of this document).

 

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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:

• Long Island (7015899)

• Long Island City (7015824)

• New York (7007567)

• Queens (7022659)

• Queens (county) (1002814)

 

Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:

• beige (color) (300266234)

• community colleges (buildings (300006612)

• façades (300002526)

• geometric patterns (300165213)

• remodeling (300135427)

• squares (geometric figures) (300055637)

 

Wikidata items:

• 3 September 2018 (Q45921181)

• 1980s architecture (Q7160142)

• Buildings and structures completed in 1992 (Q7732488)

• City University of New York (Q762266)

• LaGuardia Community College (Q6460759)

• ornamental tree (Q33249028)

• September 3 (Q2860)

• September 2018 (Q31179569)

 

Library of Congress Subject Headings:

• Factories—Remodeling for other use (sh85046837)

• Grids (Crisscross patterns) (sh2006005408)

• Trees in cities (sh85137261)

 

Union List of Artist Names IDs:

• Warner, Burns, Toan and Lunde (American architectural firm, contemporary) (500237446)

GO HERE to my designs:

  

www.zazzle.com/waves_of_stars_lace_up_keds_shoes-16778966...

 

© Andi Libberton Bird

All Rights Reserved

 

Japanese yuzen washi; flowers, keys pattern.

Although not famous for its Art Deco architecture, the provincial Victorian city of Ballarat, which was established between the 1860s and 1880s when the area was at the centre of a gold rush, does have some fine examples of interwar and post war architecture when the gold boom was replaced with wealth generated through grazing and agriculture.

 

During the 1920s and 1930s, those people thriving from farming or local industry had plenty to spend in local shops. This wonderful Art Deco facade (circa 1925 - 1930) belongs to the PPL Building in Ballarat's main shopping thoroughfare, Sturt Street. Whilst the street level may have fallen victim to the changes in marketing, the upper floors remain unchanged by fickle owners. It still retains its striking minimalist Art Deco design. It features the building's name in a rounded cartouche on the building's corner facade which overlooks Albert Street. The PPL Building has a stylised stepped roofline, long spandrels with rounded edging and glass brick windows, all of which were popular architectural features of the Art Deco movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s. The rounded edges are very representative of the Streamline Moderne movement, and the building is everything a smart and successful business would want in the booming interwar years in Australia.

grasshoppermind@wordpress.com

💀 Bit of rework and additional new tooth (apologies for the repost, I’ve managed not to compress this one too badly 🙈) www.lucyhammond.co.uk

This is one motif of my series Oriental Ornaments. There are 6 different designs in 10 colors at the moment.

 

Dies ist ein Motiv aus meiner Design-Serie Orientalische Ornamente, die zur Zeit aus Kombinationen von 6 Designformen in 10 verschiedenen Farben besteht.

Tibetan monks from Drepung Loseling Monastery making sand mandala.

Situated at 25 to 29 Barkly Street in the Victorian provincial city of Ballarat, the former East Ballarat Free Library is to this day, still an imposing building. When it was built in 1867, it must have been even more imposing, as it would have been one of only a few permanent structures in the area, which was filled with tents as the are was hit by goldmining fever.

 

The East Ballarat Free Library is not only imposing, but has an unusual design using polychromatic brickwork to define separate highly individual elements of the facade, rather like much of the Methodist Church architecture built during slightly later periods. The library is the only known work of the architect C. Ohlfsen Bagge, and dates from 1867. At that date it represents an early use of coloured brick-work in Victoria. The building is of architectural importance as an early example of the polychromatic Gothic Revival style which survives substantially intact with a number of fine interiors including the spiral staircase, the original library, the hall and the pine-lined rear rooms. The construction of the front section of the Barkly Street was completed in 1869. C. Ohlfsen-Bagge acted as honorary architect and the interior design and supervision as carried out by J. J. Lorenz. The builders were Boulton and Fyfe and the interiors were completed by Fly Brothers.

 

Established in 1862 the East Ballarat Free Library was amongst the earliest of Ballarat's social and educational institutions and when housed in its own building in Barkly Street, the library built up an outstanding collection which was second in Australia only to the State Library of Victoria . It served as a focal point for educational purposes; the school of design founded there in 1870 advancing to become the Ballarat East branch of the school of mines in the 1900s. The library was officially closed in 1973 after a life of 111 years. The books were taken to the Camp Street Library and the Ballarat Historical Society's exhibits were moved from Camp St to the Old Ballarat East Library. In 1980 the Ballarat School of Mines Council presented a proposal to the Ballarat City Council regarding occupying and managing the East Ballarat Free Library as a School of Traditional Crafts. The proposal included maintaining the building in optimum condition. In 1983, land formally occupied by the East Ballarat Free Library in Barkly St was gazetted as a reserve for educational purposes and allocated to the Ballarat School of Mines. In 1987 the former East Ballarat Library reopened after extensive renovations and repairs, as the Management Training Centre of the Ballarat School of Mines.

 

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Multicolored cootie catchers with numbers and positive words of encouragement game of chance

  

All my photographs are copyright protected, If you wish to use my photos please contact me and we can discuss usage fees.

 

©Jim Corwin_All Rights Reserved - Contact me at jimcorwin@live.com or visit my PhotoShelter site using the link Jim Corwin Photography on my Profile Page.

 

Situated at 25 to 29 Barkly Street in the Victorian provincial city of Ballarat, the former East Ballarat Free Library is to this day, still an imposing building. When it was built in 1867, it must have been even more imposing, as it would have been one of only a few permanent structures in the area, which was filled with tents as the are was hit by goldmining fever.

 

The East Ballarat Free Library is not only imposing, but has an unusual design using polychromatic brickwork to define separate highly individual elements of the facade, rather like much of the Methodist Church architecture built during slightly later periods. The library is the only known work of the architect C. Ohlfsen Bagge, and dates from 1867. At that date it represents an early use of coloured brick-work in Victoria. The building is of architectural importance as an early example of the polychromatic Gothic Revival style which survives substantially intact with a number of fine interiors including the spiral staircase, the original library, the hall and the pine-lined rear rooms. The construction of the front section of the Barkly Street was completed in 1869. C. Ohlfsen-Bagge acted as honorary architect and the interior design and supervision as carried out by J. J. Lorenz. The builders were Boulton and Fyfe and the interiors were completed by Fly Brothers.

 

Established in 1862 the East Ballarat Free Library was amongst the earliest of Ballarat's social and educational institutions and when housed in its own building in Barkly Street, the library built up an outstanding collection which was second in Australia only to the State Library of Victoria . It served as a focal point for educational purposes; the school of design founded there in 1870 advancing to become the Ballarat East branch of the school of mines in the 1900s. The library was officially closed in 1973 after a life of 111 years. The books were taken to the Camp Street Library and the Ballarat Historical Society's exhibits were moved from Camp St to the Old Ballarat East Library. In 1980 the Ballarat School of Mines Council presented a proposal to the Ballarat City Council regarding occupying and managing the East Ballarat Free Library as a School of Traditional Crafts. The proposal included maintaining the building in optimum condition. In 1983, land formally occupied by the East Ballarat Free Library in Barkly St was gazetted as a reserve for educational purposes and allocated to the Ballarat School of Mines. In 1987 the former East Ballarat Library reopened after extensive renovations and repairs, as the Management Training Centre of the Ballarat School of Mines.

 

Get this design on your choice of high quality fabric, at Spoonflower. From the Still Winter Woods color story; Also available on wall coverings, wall decals and giftwrap.

Museum of Islamic Art

Istanbul, Turkey

Situated at 25 to 29 Barkly Street in the Victorian provincial city of Ballarat, the former East Ballarat Free Library is to this day, still an imposing building. When it was built in 1867, it must have been even more imposing, as it would have been one of only a few permanent structures in the area, which was filled with tents as the are was hit by goldmining fever.

 

The East Ballarat Free Library is not only imposing, but has an unusual design using polychromatic brickwork to define separate highly individual elements of the facade, rather like much of the Methodist Church architecture built during slightly later periods. The library is the only known work of the architect C. Ohlfsen Bagge, and dates from 1867. At that date it represents an early use of coloured brick-work in Victoria. The building is of architectural importance as an early example of the polychromatic Gothic Revival style which survives substantially intact with a number of fine interiors including the spiral staircase, the original library, the hall and the pine-lined rear rooms. The construction of the front section of the Barkly Street was completed in 1869. C. Ohlfsen-Bagge acted as honorary architect and the interior design and supervision as carried out by J. J. Lorenz. The builders were Boulton and Fyfe and the interiors were completed by Fly Brothers.

 

Established in 1862 the East Ballarat Free Library was amongst the earliest of Ballarat's social and educational institutions and when housed in its own building in Barkly Street, the library built up an outstanding collection which was second in Australia only to the State Library of Victoria . It served as a focal point for educational purposes; the school of design founded there in 1870 advancing to become the Ballarat East branch of the school of mines in the 1900s. The library was officially closed in 1973 after a life of 111 years. The books were taken to the Camp Street Library and the Ballarat Historical Society's exhibits were moved from Camp St to the Old Ballarat East Library. In 1980 the Ballarat School of Mines Council presented a proposal to the Ballarat City Council regarding occupying and managing the East Ballarat Free Library as a School of Traditional Crafts. The proposal included maintaining the building in optimum condition. In 1983, land formally occupied by the East Ballarat Free Library in Barkly St was gazetted as a reserve for educational purposes and allocated to the Ballarat School of Mines. In 1987 the former East Ballarat Library reopened after extensive renovations and repairs, as the Management Training Centre of the Ballarat School of Mines.

 

Today I wanted to show you how some of the patterns that I’ve previously shown you for ‘My pattern design of the week’ would look like as wallpapers. The patters have been slightly changed and I’ve also added a few other design elements to them where I thought the design needed a little extra work.

 

Please visit my blog at claudiaowen.wordpress.com/ or my website at claudiaowen.com/

Here was the nightclub "Stateum Nights." The panels of OSB are trashy-looking!

 

Everybody likes to look at undulating thin-shell roofs. Do you like to look at patterns of square holes in tapered retaining walls.

 

The building was the Mount Clemens Federal Savings and Loan Association, built 1961, designed by William Kessler. In 2008 it was converted to the nightclub "The Bank" a/k/a "The Bank Nightlife," which closed circa 2010. Per this news article, it then became the nightclub "The Vault," which closed in 2013, and then became Stateum Nights circa 2019. I love nightclubs!

 

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In downtown Mount Clemens, Michigan, on July 31st, 2021, at the southeast corner of South Main Street and Terry Street.

 

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Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names terms:

• Macomb (county) (1002617)

• Mount Clemens (2052720)

 

Art & Architecture Thesaurus terms:

• banks (buildings) (300005214)

• columns (architectural elements) (300001571)

• curved (300010305)

• geometric patterns (300165213)

• gold (color) (300311191)

• Mid-Century Modernist (300343610)

• nightclubs (300007107)

• openwork (300253899)

• oriented strand board (300380238)

• paint (coating) (300015029)

• remodeling (300135427)

• repurposing (300417716)

• retaining walls (300005073)

• shell structures (300001276)

 

Wikidata items:

• 31 July 2021 (Q69306130)

• 1960s in architecture (Q11185676)

• 1961 in architecture (Q2812275)

• concrete shell (Q3737546)

• July 31 (Q2715)

• July 2021 (Q61312805)

• Metro Detroit (Q1925718)

• savings and loan association (Q2091703)

• Southeast Michigan (Q3502886)

• Treaty of Detroit (Q1639077)

 

Library of Congress Subject Headings:

• Roofs, Shell (sh85115342)

 

Union List of Artist Names IDs:

• Kessler, William H. (American architect, born 1924) (500067887)

Welcome to the my hypnotic space !

Looking inside a hot air balloon before lift-off with multi-colored patterns against morning light Redmond Washington State USA

 

All my photographs are copyright protected, If you wish to use my photos please contact me and we can discuss usage fees.

 

©Jim Corwin_All Rights Reserved 2019 Contact me at jscorwin@mac.com or visit my PhotoShelter site using the link Jim Corwin Photography on my Profile Page.

My website is jimcorwin.photoshelter.com

My E-Mail Address is jscorwin@mac.com

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