View allAll Photos Tagged ladder
Best seen in large view. There is a ladder in the red space at the top. I loved the lines and colors of this very abstrace scene on the North side of Gehry's EMP design.
Last night we climbed a lot of ladders at The Soap Factory. Here's Lead Volunteer for programming, Jay Mac Bride, showing off some of the results
I feel this wooden ladder shows how old and how useless it is compared to others. Dirt has accumulated along the ridges in the wood, as well as bird droppings. This image demonstrates a bird's eye view of the ladder. With this perspective, the ladder feels as if it is disappearing.
This weird looking contraption is a ladder for the loft bed, made of 3/4", galvanized steel pipe that I polished with turpentine. It'll be mounted to one end of Aden's loft bed. It's got monkey-bar spacing of 18". Time will tell how well that is going to work. (To say I'm a little high right now from turpentine fumes, is an understatement.)
The ladder in the foreground leads to the top of a two-story high apricot tree in my house when I lived in La Reina. A dangerous climb, but the fruit was delicious. Painted 1989, Santiago, Chile.
My dad had brought the ladder up to help install some curtain rods. I guess Scampy wanted to help out?
On the street. This layout used sixteen 12" blocks and is really easy to put together. The pattern shows you how to make 3 blocks at a time from one fat quarter of fabric.
Free tutorial (by me!) for this quilt at Sew, Mama, Sew!.
I had the pleasure of observing a family of ladder-backed woodpeckers. Adults teaching the youngsters how to forage for food on the tree bark. They didn't pay much attention to me as they worked away. In Montell, Uvalde County, Texas.
a frequent visitor in my garden, various sizes and often darker-
Buckeye1 identifyed it as a Ladder Snake or Treppennatter, Elaphe scalaris- Culebra de escalera in Spain.
This is a young one, the adult ones grow to almost 2m here, some are very dark and hard to see in the rocky terrain.