View allAll Photos Tagged lightfixture
*Hardwood & porcelain flooring throughout
*Custom draperies
*Custom light fixtures
*Custom cabinetry with marble tops
*Recessed under-cabinet lighting in kitchen
We were at this restaurant a year ago for breakfast. We tried it for dinner last night and were not disappointed.
Rocket Bar has overall weird lighting, it's pretty dark, but the lamps are striking and colorful. Here is the collection over the bar area - this photo is pretty messed up but rather than deleting it, I'll think of it as an exercise in abstract blobs.
I've been meaning to do some lighthearted scene, but I keep coming back to abstract shots :P That's where my heart is! But I'd love the expand my style of photography, though!
My contacts give me so much inspiration for different types of photography - Thank you so much!
This is a light fixture over the table in my kitchen.. The circle is actually the part that the metal branches begins, but being out of focus makes it look like a hole where the pipes come out of (At least to me, anyways!).
Yay! Thursday!
I saw a photo in one of the train-station-related Flickr groups of a very similar fluted metal light fixture on an old station in New York state. It reminded me that I am sure I've seen this type of light at many old train stations all over the place. One of them is this one in Framingham, but I know I've seen them elsewhere and will have to look through my photos. Old train stations all over the country often have similar styles and adornments (eg overhanging roof, prominent roof brackets, bay window) and maybe this type of light fixture was part of the "train station style."
The North End Diner and Best Western North Des Moines appear to be a playground for anyone keen on wrecking everything in sight. I am thinking the diner closed sometime in 2009 or late 2008 and the hotel was closed before with no intention on reopening. The hotel a former Ramada was refurbished in 2004 but all the reviews I read have this place listed as a dump. I guess that could be one portion of why it closed. It was a sprawling hotel with 4 separate room units, a huge pool, and entrance with the North End Diner all attached by a long walkway that was never heated or cooled. My wife had posted her pictures on FB and a local fire fighter had commented that they used the hotel portion for training and now it is so full of mold that it is unsafe to enter. I guess that is no reason for vagrants and kids to enter looking for something to smash as almost every window and door are make for an entrance now. The place will be gone at some point the hotel is a ehh who cares in my book but the Diner was a cool place to eat. And there seem to be less and less of the old school diners around to get the 50’s feel for your burgers.
for more information about the horse lamp.
for more information about the pig table.
for more information about moooi.
Ugh. My Nikon F3 is goddamn cursed. Almost every time I shoot with it, I fuck something up.
Today's fuckup was with the AI metering tab, which I forgot to flip back down when using an AI lens. So about a third of my roll of film didn't get metered properly.
The beautiful chandeliers of Lake Union Cafe, rescued from the demolition of an even older building, with the copper ceiling in view as well.
Photo by StudioCP.
[Reception - 052 - small]
Back in January of 2009 I had to return to the house we still owned in Romeoville, IL, to effect repairs on our ice- and water-damaged home.
(2009-01-19-light-01203-new)
I had to photographically document the damage for insurance. But while I was at it, I decided to shoot the chandelier hanging over our now empty and worse-for-wear dining room.
We no longer own the home. But at least I have the pictures!
(2009-01-19-light-01203-new)
Beautiful ice formation on a light at the Marina. Pretty obvious that this was formed during a windy day.
here are two other similar images by others:
dragonfly19x: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/dragonfly19x/4261765901/in/photostream/]
pixquik: [http://www.flickr.com/photos/24688934@N02/4272399951/in/photostream/]
Love this because it looks old, but it's a reproduction. The former fixture was ugly and didn't fit the style of the house.
The Music Center was the inspiration of Dorothy Chandler (heir to the Buffums department store fortune and wife to the heir of the Los Angeles Times) for a new home to the Los Angeles Philharmonic as well as a performing arts venue and an innovative drama venue. Fundraising started in 1955 and the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion opened in 1965 and was designed by Welton Becket. The Ahmanson Theater and the Mark Taper Forum opened in 1967. In 2003, the Walt Disney Concert Hall opened and became the new home of the Philharmonic.
First Baptist Church of Deanwood, Washington DC. Founded in 1901, the First Baptist Church broke ground for a new church in 1929 when it outgrew its frame church further north along 45th Street. Roscoe I. Vaughn, a long-time African American architect and educator, designed the church using a modified Gothic style common for urban churches of the period; it was completed in 1938. In December 1960, First Baptist broke ground for the massive "addition" on the adjacent corner lot. Designed by Ronald E. Senseman, the new building was oriented to Sheriff Road and contained a spacious new sanctuary with social, educational, and support spaces below.