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Here's the lamp repaired. The shade is from the Martha Stewart collection at Kmart. Normally I hate Kmart, but they have the cheapest shades around. Anywhere else in Manhattan a shade like this costs at least $75. This one was about $16. BIG difference. I bought a 10-inch harp for a few bucks at the hardware store.
This is from a book but I don't care. Suspended lamps like these lit up Myrtle Gardens and Williamson Street (to name a couple of places) in Liverpool.
En este 2º tutorial continuamos con nuestra lámpara decorativa de materiales reciclados.
Vamos a montar la original tulipa, que hicimos en nuestro anterior video, sobre su base. No te lo pierdas. www.bricoblog.eu/lampara-decorativa-push-de-reciclado/
This is the lamp just alongside our home station's exit stairs. I love the way the abundance of cobwebs makes the design look much funkier than it actually is, like something transported from a future where the human race has died out.
Shade made from little glass tiles. Reminds me of subway tiles.
I figure it'll need 7 or 8 more rows of tiles.
This was the first item in 'tacky corner' & started the family tradition of buying tacky items from any holiday. It's from Egypt.
The lamp is operated by rotating it around, and one or two lamps are turned on and off depending on the orientation.
A pair Flowery porcelain with Pagoda style shades in Off-White Silk with Dimmer: Rp 900,000 (available in Jakarta only) Handmade