View allAll Photos Tagged lightfixture
I realized around bedtime yesterday that I hadn't taken a photo yet, so I decided to snap one of the only thing well-lit enough: the light fixture in our living room.
Then once the tile is up and wrapped all the way around the counters, up to the cabinets and out to the door...your sight line is NOT broken and thus it makes the room flow and look bigger...just love that :D
con-tain-it.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/04/metmorphisis-mo...
at national mechanics. hot, right? reminds me of the cool old bottles megan and jacob used as vases at their wedding. i need to learn how to build lamps.
Maxwell's Plum opened in New York City in April 1966. It was noted for its garish Art Nouveau/Art Deco/Art Whaddya Got interior, celebrities, and good food. It closed in 1988.
www.yelp.com/biz/locanda-san-francisco
You ever experience that phenomenon where you're *sure* you've seen something in GWSF already, but when you look in the founds/unfounds, it's not there? This pic is like that for me.
An interesting vintage street light fixture hangs in the Gothic Quarter, Barcelona's oldest neighborhood.
Barcelona, Spain.
I kind of liked this light fixture in a Jongno restaurant. An onion sack of burned out bulbs, and 1 working bulb.
This was the IKEA rail that we intalled previously and really like it...but it was too expensive to keep it up and tile around it or even worse, drill holes through the new white tiles...
con-tain-it.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/04/metmorphisis-mo...
Vintage 1910s or 1920s, with art glass. I really like this. It's in a rental hall that a group I'm in rents. Unfortunately, you can see that there is a fluorescent fixture very near it.
Photos taken for an Inhabitat.com article. For commercial use of these works and any derivatives, contact Leonel Lima Ponce or Inhabitat.com.
New coffee shop in Astoria, Queens, interior and furniture designed by Ecosystems.
Accompanying article:
inhabitat.com/nyc/the-queens-kickshaw-astoria-gets-a-new-...
This light fixture was in the house when I bought it. I don't know how old it is but I'm guessing it's pretty old. It has the neatest feature: turn the finial on the very bottom of the fixture and.... First turn - 2 lights come on... Second turn - 3 lights come on... Third turn - 5 lights!... Forth turn - all the lights go out. My mom found that little feature by mistake as she was re-wiring the fixture. Pretty nifty. I love it!
In between stripping 50 years of paint off doors, and creating a fire bowl out of a 55 gallon drum, Robert and I made this lamp set up to install on top of the radiator. I had two broken antique articulated lamps, and the wooden beam we salvaged a few months ago in north philly from a building that was being demolished.