View allAll Photos Tagged lightfixture
To Group admins, please don't keep inviting this image into "creative digital art" groups. This is a simple photograph with some contrast adjustments only, no PS, no CG were involved. Thank you.
This bubble is about 1/8" across if that. Part of my overhead kitchen light. This was not easy to steady and shoot.
Happy Macro Mondays
IMG_0482c 2022 08 27 fIle
partial frontage view of the Wichita MOD Lodge
Medicine Park, OK
***Note: Clarity/Contrast edits in Flickr Photo Editor
Captured at the Portland international Airport (PDX) for Crazy Tuesday theme: upside down.
😉 HaPpY CrAzY Tuesday 😉
A shot from the library at the prestigious St. Ignatius College Preparatory School founded in 1869 in Chicago's near west side. Taken during Chicago Open House 2021.
The Moss Mansion Historic House Museum is located in Billings, Montana on 914 Division St. It is a turn of the century, red-stoned mansion built by P.B. Moss, who moved to Billings from Paris, Missouri. It was inhabited solely by Mr. and Mrs. Moss, their six children, and 3 servants until 1984. The house was built for a cost of $105,000, when most homes averaged about $3000. It has 28 rooms, and is 60 feet (18 m) square. It rises 45 feet (14 m) into the air.
The Mansion is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Visitors can still see the original furniture, draperies, carpets and fixtures during a one-hour guided tour. Seasonal exhibits are also featured. The Moss Mansion was designed by the famous New York Architect Henry Hardenbergh, who also designed the original Waldorf-Astoria, Plaza Hotel, The Dakota, Williard Hotel, and Copely Hotel. The Moss Mansion is operated by the Billings Preservation Society, Inc., a non-profit organization.
NRHP Reference#:
82003181
147
Stair light fixture on an overcast day at the Tacoma Museum of Glass, Tacoma, WA i6s+03210 - Happy Sliders Sunday!
Taken at the Breakers Mansion in Newport, RI. The amount of detail in the architecture is unbelievable. Highly recommended if you are ever in the RI area.
(Actually The Breakers was built in the gilded age but I like the sound of golden age better!)
lyrics from children's song/activity:
here we go loopity loo
here we go loopity li
here we go loopity loo
all on a saturday night