View allAll Photos Tagged lampshade
For today’s DailyShoot assignment: Make a photograph of a beautiful simple shape, such as an egg, today. Utilize lighting and focus to make it sing. ds662
This is no egg, but this lampshade does have a beautiful and simple shape.
METAL ART LAMP SHADES FOR INDOOR AND OUTDOOR USE
CHOOSE FROM GALLARY TO CUSTOMISE YOUR LAMPSHADE OR E MAIL ME A PHOTO OF YOUR CHOISE (THE PHOTO MUST BE OF HIGH QUALITY } TO CREATE YOUR OWN PERSONALISED LAMPSHADE
HOUSE NUMBERS CAN BE INCORPIRATED IN THE DESIGN
christoventer@telkomsa.net
I saw this lampshade at a shop in southern California. It appears to be made of starched white cotton (crochet?) and was about 30" tall.
Lovely Vintage paper Lampshade design from Rosie's vintage at the Old lamp Shed, made in the Uk by Mum's
easy peasy...studded with tiny pink rosebuds. template of the lampshade over whatever fabric you want.
Paddock was built at the start of the 2nd World War below the Post Office Research Station in Dollis Hill. The purpose of the two level citadel was to act as a standby to the Cabinet War Rooms in Whitehall. The bunker became operational in 1940 with the War Cabinet meeting there on 3rd October.
Churchill did not like the new bunker and by the autumn of 1943 the standby cabinet war rooms were relocated to the North Rotunda in Marsham Street, close to Whitehall; Paddock was abandoned the following year.
During the cold war, Paddock was suggested as a replacement for the North London Group War Room at Partingdale Lane, Mill Hill but this was rejected by the GLC. It was also, along with Station Z at Harrow, suggested as the Main Control Centre for the whole of London with the 4 (later 5) Group Controls reporting to it. The idea of 1 central control was never adopted and the upper floor at Paddock was relegated to a Post Office social club.
Following closure of Post Office Research Station, in the mid 1990's the site was sold to a property developer who converted the Research Station into luxury flats with a new housing estate on the rest of the site. The single storey surface building above Paddock was demolished but the citadel, which has local authority listing was untouched and two access points were retained one an unobtrusive steel door in a wall between two houses and the other a brick blockhouse beside the road which also houses a small electricity sub station. The site has now been handed over to a housing association.
[Subterranea Britannica www.subbrit.org.uk]
I really like the simplicity of this photo. Simple line, tone and colour. Nothing extraneous. I think it would make a good magazine cover.
Having lots of fun with my new lensbaby 2.0. Shot at f5.6 1/30th of a sec.
'The Hill House is considered to be Scottish architect Charles Rennie Mackintosh’s domestic masterpiece. Commissioned by Glasgow publisher Walter Blackie, Charles Rennie Mackintosh and his wife, Margaret, designed almost everything you can see here, from the building itself to the furniture and textiles'.
And I'm finally making Tiffany Lamps! I've wanted to do these for a long time too. These will be ready to go for Gacha Land!
I took this lampshade down recently when I changed the bulb … but it's hard to get back up again 😳
The Our Daily Challenge group has chosen Glass today.
I'm not sure this was worth taking my life in my hands for, lying on my back on the edge of the seawall with a 20 ft drop behind me. Fear could explain why I've managed to still get the nearest leg out of focus.
It looks like a lampshade but does anyone know the correct name for this thing?
This is a photo of Elmer Bischoff's painting, Yellow Lampshade, corrected for perspective and cleaned up a bit. Kinda fun, distorting the photo to "undistort" the subject matter.