View allAll Photos Tagged hinge

This hinge is slowly rusting away in a bunker ar the Hirtshals Bunker Museum in Denmark.

Abandoned barn, Harjankylä Kauhajoki

A selection of antique hinges from the L.G. Lee and Son Hardware Store in Almonte, Ontario, Canada.

www.insideottawavalley.com/news-story/5703566-l-g-lee-son...

 

Our Daily Challenge: HINGE(S)

ODC-Hinge(s)

 

My glasses have a hinge on them.

Washington DC

Flickr Lounge ~ Rust

Our Daily Challenge ~ Old Things

 

Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. Any comments or Faves are very much appreciated.

Veg Out Community Gardens, St.Kilda

Heavy duty farm gate, this top hinge combined with the lower version, allows for the support of 12 feet gates without issue.

Photo taken at the Santa Barbara Natural History Museum in Santa Barbara, California.

LENS: Nikon non-AI 200mm Nikkor f/4

 

CAMERA: Olympus E-P2

The top of a giant gate that is attached to the Loch Raven Dam.

October 2011

 

Minola X-370

Kodak Gold 200

 

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Crazy Tuesday Theme: Rust

 

Thanks to everyone who took the time to view, comment, and fave my photo. It’s really appreciated. 😊

Canon A-1, Tri-X @400, D-76 1+1 20C for 9 min.

Entrance door to the prison cells in Zollern Castle in Balingen

Macro Mondays - Natural Shells

Bi-valve clam shell found on the little bit of beach at 'Wakering Stairs' at the mouth of the Thames Estuary.

Love my Starck glasses

A little expensive but worth every penny!

I'm guessing the hinges at one time held awning. HWW

Hmmm, that'd be a great name for a pub.

Clayburn Village, Abbotsford, BC. September 11, 2021.

near Olifants camp, Kruger NP, South Africa

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission

© All Rights Reserved to begumidast photography

Shot taken for Saturday Self Challenge 17/10/2024 -- Hinges .

After a number of shots I settled for this one just because of the angle rather than all the straight shots . This is on one of three pairs of gates at the Entrance / Exits to The Mansion House in Leatherhead . There are a few more hinges in the first comment box .

As to the Mansion House , personally it has scarred me for life as the school dentist operated from here back in the 50s/60s and the mental scars of those visits , well do not do me any favours !!

The Mansion House has a bit of history to it so here is an abstracted article by the Leatherhead & Local History Society .

With the dissolution of Leeds Priory by Henry VIII, the original property was granted to the

Stydolf family of Mickleham and Pachesham and it was leased by one of Henry’s yeoman

falconers, Robert Cheseman. In 1588 Edmund Tylney, Master of the Revels to Queen

Elizabeth I took up occupancy. The Queen dined with him there on 3rd August 1591. Shortly before the Glorious Revolution in 1688, James ITs Chancellor, the notorious Judge Jeffrey’s,

came to the Mansion to see his dying daughter. The house was rebuilt in 1739 by Alexander

Akehurst in warm Flemish brick, well proportioned and evenly fenestrated with nine twowindowed bays.

In about 1846 Dr Thomas Payne founded ‘The Mansion Grammar School for Boys’ there.

The school was a boarding and day school for about 50 boys from 10 years upwards. He

taught the Jacotot system of education based on the principle that because all men have

equal intelligence received from God. The school continued until some time during the

1870s.

When it was sold to Herbert Reeves in 1922 it had 10 acres of grounds and a boathouse. In

1949, LUDC agreed with SCC to compulsory purchase the building for use as a public library

and health clinic. The building was also used later as a youth employment and careers

centre.

In May 2000 the ground floor rooms underwent restoration to become the Registry Office

and the library was moved to another part of the building.

 

A quick Sight & Sound - Gates of Babylon

 

youtu.be/z03ZRYh4GKY?feature=shared

 

Taken in Denver, Colorado

Found these in my grandfather’s optometrist’s chest. They are part of fasteners used to connect the hingers of eyeglasses. Typically used for old style horn-rimmed glasses.

An old utility box in the Dallas Arboretum.

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