View allAll Photos Tagged harmonica
My husband has a guitar but I wanted to do something a little different for this. Then I remembered the harmonica I bought him several Christmases ago. He claimed he wanted one but I don't think he's played it at all. I guess he just liked the idea of it.
my great grandfather plays this great four-sided harmonica. He keeps an old hymn book with it, worn pages earmarked, a scrap of paper with a list of hymns to play. He allowed me to take a couple of shots of him playing, but the whole time looked at me like he couldn't understand what all the fuss was for.
This harmonica belonged to my grandfather on my father's side. My grandmother sent it to me after he died and I still have the typed note that came with it. It lost the smell of their home ages ago, but besides the package, that was one of my favorite parts of this object.
These are the
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
Very dusty, though. I must clean them!
These are the
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
Very dusty, though. I must clean them!
Harmonica Chair
The harmonica (accordion in Polish) is a popular musical instrument with a distinctive pleated shape. The Harmonica chair is an experiment in deconstructing the pleats into separate triangles and making flexible connections. We used plywood for the structure and flexible jute rope for connectors. The geometry of the triangles helped to minimize wasted plywood. The tension of the yarn keeps the structure together and creates a seat.
— Barbara Ozieblo
not a very successful macro session. gotta learn more about lighting. it might help if I had some decent lamps.
If you do not know what this has to do with westerns then you should watch (or listen some movies pronto)
I didn't manage to catch this gentleman's name, but as I was stood watching some protests in Madrid and trying to figure out what was happening (camera in hand), he approached and started talking to me in Spanish. I've only had a handful of Spanish lessons, so I couldn't follow what he was saying until he smiled and said "¡Harmónica!" He whipped an harmonica out of his pocket, started dancing and playing along to the chants. I managed to muster just enough Spanish to ask him if I could take his photograph and he happily obliged.
These are the
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
These are the a pair of Hohner harmonicas I picked up second hand before I left the UK.
Very dusty, though. I must clean them!