View allAll Photos Tagged joinery

A wooden salt bowl. The lid is fixed to the bottom and slides over with perfect precision snugly closing the salt inside. On the left a wooden spoon for the salt. Realy nice wood-work.

This was another interactive piece that was like the art of Kintsugi (golden joinery) in which people took broken pieces and bound them together to create different sculptures altogether.

 

**All photos are copyrighted**

joinery is an art perfected over years of crafting

where two things are linked together like a fit

and made one by the mastery of technical skills

let us link together let us be that union meant to be.

Classic construction...

We have a friend who very kindly leaves us in bags of scrap wood from his joinery workshop for lighting the wood burning stove.

 

I lifted this perfectly circular piece out of the kindling bucket and put my mug of tea on it. Then i took a picture.

 

Smile on Saturday theme is "Recycled"

 

The Beatles - Norwegian Wood

www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_V6y1ZCg_8

 

From Wikipedia: Kintsugi (金継ぎ, "golden joinery"), also known as kintsukuroi (金繕い, "golden repair"), is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by mending the areas of breakage with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, a method similar to the maki-e technique. As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.

 

The art of kintsugi is often used as a symbol and metaphor for resilience - a concept that indicates the ability to deal positively with traumatic events, to positively reorganize and rebuild life when facing difficulties while remaining sensitive to the positive opportunities that life offers.

 

Kintsugi - Spirited Beyond is exactly this: the union of two creative minds - Valarie Muffin Meow (zalindah) and Bambi (norahbrent) - coming together to create something magical and unique as a way to cope with Bambi's RL loss, a place of extreme spirituality and beauty.

 

Continue reading on my blog: mutisslworld.blogspot.com/2021/01/d008-kintsugi-spirited-...

 

Location: Kintsugi - Spirited Beyond

URL: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Runaway/54/99/23 (Closing SOON)

 

Joinery install, 2011. London, Cantilevered staircase, Staircase I worked on during my Joinery install days.

Coffee table. I want one.

"offstage at Thalia Theater"

In the joinery of the Thalia Theater.

Balboa Terrace

San Francisco, California

"offstage at Thalia Theater"

In the joinery of the Thalia Theater.

Dass sie "keine Böcke mehr haben" kommt bei den Tischlern im Thalia Theater wohl nicht vor ;-)

Glynde, South Australia

Seinäjoen Taidehalli Art Museum

And The Tate Modern..

Kintsugi (金継ぎ?, きんつぎ, "golden joinery"), also known as Kintsukuroi (金繕い?, きんつくろい, "golden repair"), is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum, a method similar to the maki-e technique. As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.

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Il kintsugi (金継ぎ), o kintsukuroi (金繕い), letteralmente "riparare con l'oro", è una pratica giapponese che consiste nell'utilizzo di oro o argento liquido o lacca con polvere d'oro per la riparazione di oggetti in ceramica (in genere vasellame), usando il prezioso metallo per saldare assieme i frammenti. La tecnica permette di ottenere degli oggetti preziosi sia dal punto di vista economico (per via della presenza di metalli preziosi) sia da quello artistico: ogni ceramica riparata presenta un diverso intreccio di linee dorate unico ed ovviamente irripetibile per via della casualità con cui la ceramica può frantumarsi. La pratica nasce dall'idea che dall'imperfezione e da una ferita possa nascere una forma ancora maggiore di perfezione estetica e interiore.

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Details in my (old) blog, link in bio. Or ask if you want to know what i'm wearing.

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This pic, along with two watercolors of mine and works by other artists, can be seen at the "Ferite/Wounds" Expo at Second Life Italia Land.

 

Interested In Buying A Physical Copy Or Digital Copy Of This Photo?

Feel Free To Email me at:

Joshjhowells@gmail.com

At least that's what I think it says.

Interested In Buying A Physical Copy Or Digital Copy Of This Photo?

Feel Free To Email me at:

Joshjhowells@gmail.com

Years ago things would have been repaired or manufactured by riveting. Now most everything metal is welded. In my work as an artist / blacksmith though I do use both methods favoring the rivets as they are a more traditional method of joinery.

A car park is along the Woodchurch Road, heading north from Appledore towards Brattle.

 

It is managed by Kent County Council's Country Parks service.[7] It is noted for its bluebells in spring and for nightingales. There are woodland walks and panoramic views over Appledore and Romney Marshes.

 

The woodland is frequently coppiced for various timber uses. Including oak thinnings being used in Shorne Wood Country Parks new visitor centre, as the window and roof joinery.[8]

 

The wood, is surrounded by three other woods, Great Heron Wood (to the North), Little Heron Wood (to the East) and Butness Wood (further to the East).

“Kintsugi (金継ぎ, "golden joinery") is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery by mending the areas of breakage with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum... As a philosophy, it treats breakage and repair as part of the history of an object, rather than something to disguise.”

 

The mends we make to our now can be one of our greatest features, for it shows our strength in marrying our weaknesses, and stitching them into our lives.

 

I hope that I can mend myself more with this gift of time. I hope that my piecing myself back together will be worth it, that the fabrics of my being can hold tight enough for me to do some good.

ISO 200 16mm f8.0 25 sec, 8:01pm

 

Emanuele Joinery - Newton, South Australia.

 

Flickr Explore - September 13, 2013

Munster Jet Partnership (Munster Joinery) Cessna 525B CitationJet CJ3 Reg: EI-MJC landing at Cork.

Found sled from previous photo.

Impressive lashing and joinery, some the likes of I had not seen before. (View large if possible)

Hasselblad 500CM

Distagon CB 60mm 3.5

Kodak TriX 400 rated 1600 with Rodinal

The Grade II* listed Lincoln Crown Court inside Lincoln Castle Lincoln, Lincolnshire.

 

The building replaced the previous Lincoln Castle County Hall (which itself had replaced the earlier old Shire Hall) after it was declared insecure, an act for rebuilding was obtained, and demolition took place in 1822. Demolished was completed by using prison labour.

 

The new County Hall and Assize Courts was built between 1823-1828 in Regency "Gothick" style by architect Sir Robert Smirke using bricks were reused from the previous building. The masons were G Willoughby of Malton; joinery by Messrs Baker and Son of The Strand, London; painters Messrs Dixon and Sons; plastering G Smith; plumbers and glaziers Thomas Vent of Boston. Castle Clerk of the Works, William Webb.

 

In 1928 a south porch was added extra prisoner’s cells/interview rooms by architects Scorer Gamble and Co.

 

giant dovetails [the angle is not 90 but 120 degrees] from the altar of a wooden church in Valcea County, XIX century, Romania

 

detaliu de la o biserica de lemn din Valcea

Munster Joinery is a leading international manufacturer of energy efficient windows and doors. Their production facility in Ballydesmond gets much of it’s day to day power needs from 2 wind turbines erected in 2009 with an electrical output of 4.2 megawatts and a Biomass steam turbine with an electrical output of 2.8 megawatts. The wind turbines are capable of powering 2,260 homes annually. They were whizzing around today, it's so windy here! For 115 pictures in 2015 #38 Technology

 

Wishing all my Flickr friends a very Happy Telegraph Tuesday. I've been very busy helping my daughter move to Killarney to start a new job (hurrah) so I'll try & catch up with comments later.

Parkwood is an 80-acre (320,000 m2) woodland 5 miles (8.0 km) east south east of Tenterden near Appledore.

 

A car park is along the Woodchurch Road, heading north from Appledore towards Brattle.

 

It is managed by Kent County Council's Country Parks service.[7] It is noted for its bluebells in spring and for nightingales. There are woodland walks and panoramic views over Appledore and Romney Marshes.

 

The woodland is frequently coppiced for various timber uses. Including oak thinnings being used in Shorne Wood Country Parks new visitor centre, as the window and roof joinery.[8]

 

The wood, is surrounded by three other woods, Great Heron Wood (to the North), Little Heron Wood (to the East) and Butness Wood (further to the East).

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