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Lamp made out of aircraft plywood, wich is so flexible, that it almost gets a textile expression. The stand is made of bent steel, like a cable on the floor.
material: aircraft plywood, steel
size: 1370 mm, 690 mm
made by: Blond
photo credits: Christian Hersborn
for press: download the image by clicking "all sizes" above the image, then choos the size you want and click "download"
Cambridge: St Peter's Terrace. An old gas-lamp now adapted to a low-energy bulb controlled by a daylight sensor on the top. Typical lantern, of the "Windsor" pattern introduced by Sugg in 1898, though it may be one of the many later copies. The collar has
a single bar support for a lamplighter's ladder.
Lumiy's LED desk lamps and solid-state lighting solutions are renowned for their brilliant lighting qualities producing rich, vibrant colors and crystal, sharp text. We combine the world's finest LEDs, the highest efficiency optical drivers, and advance composite housings to produce lighting units that achieve extreme levels of lighting performance and aesthetic beauty. Lumiy's lights have been recognized as one of the best led desk lamp for the office and in the home. Lumiy exercises a rigorous commitment to quality, performance, and reliability ensure that our products are build for years of lasting use.
Refurbished table lamp with clear base, filled with blue and green marbles. Base is silver in color, with light blue shade.
I'm just now becoming aware that pictures look different on different screens (yeah, I'm a slow learner). On my laptop screen, this looks too dark, but when connected and displayed on my desk monitor, it looks brighter and just what I wanted (the difference is whether you can make out the entire elliptical top of the lamp glass when the photo is viewed full-size on black, or whether the left-hand side is completely lost in shadow). Now it is driving me crazy that what people see on their screen when they look at one of my photos may not be the image I see, which in some cases has been finely tuned to have exactly the brightness or tones I wanted. Surely, more experienced photographers must have a way to address this discrepancy... or is this why artists drink so much?
Project 52 - Week 3 - Still Life
Single Einstein above in softbox, white cards left and right. Nikon D800 with Nikkor 45mm PC-E.
This is a bronze swag lamp from the 1970s which the previous owners of our house left for us, when we bought the house from them. This photo was taken on 1/15/2012, using a Canon PowerShot A1000-IS.
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission.
All rights reserved.
© 2012 Steve Clark
Bacchus Glass Table & Bedside Lamp $169 & $199 Pottery Barn www.potterybarn.com/products/bacchus-table-bedside-lamp/?...
Esta lámpara, se enciende con sangre humana... Uno consigue el envase con el líquido, rompe el cuello de la botella, y al ponerle sangre humana, se prende de ésta manera. Solo se puede usar una vez.
La idea es concientizar el público del uso de energía volviéndolo personal; pero yo creo que eso no es lo importante... creo que es la idea de ser capaz de cambiar algo muy interno, por una respuesta externa. Yo entregaría muchas gotas de sangre, para poder encender muchas lamparitas.
(esto es lo más bonito que he visto en muuuucho tiempo, y es el tipo de arte que me gustaría hacer; el arte hecho objeto, la poética del objeto en relación al ser humano, y la necesidad de crear respuesta con nuestros actos)
así de pún o más?
: )
Foto e info sacada de aquí! www.miket.co.uk/blood_lamp.html