View allAll Photos Tagged paintrollers
This awesome roller brush offers one of the easiest ways to pick up & remove pet hair & other light debris from all kinds of surfaces.
Renovations at Filldor Court, 35‒24 72nd Street, Jackson Heights, 6 May 2010. (Photograph by Elyaqim Mosheh Adam.)
Not that you can tell from the white balance in this shot, but the paint color for my stairway is "Island Shores" and is a light/medium turquoise color.
This is over a year old, but it's when Lou and I got in our painters outfits and painted the bedroom
Photo-A-Day #2287
Our bedroom after it has been primed. The painting is getting under way. More at www.benspark.com/continuing-to-prep-for-painting.html
Someone's been having fun with a paint-roller by the looks of it. Judging by the location I'd say "art" students from Bower Ashton...
This bird made it's nest on top of a couple of old paint rollers I had hung up on the rain gutters on the back of my house. What an odd place for a nest. I guess the bird thought the rollers were nice and soft.
My father was a painter, and I am wearing his old painter coveralls and holding his old paint rollers. I was quite thrilled to find out that a Canadian, Norman James Breakey in 1940s invented the paint roller. I can't wait to tell my father when I see him on Sunday!
Is there some secret way to use a paint-roller without splattering one's hand? [Yes, besides wearing gloves.]
PA_998 [30 points]
A fresh painted space invader in the 2ème arrondissement of Paris. This one couldn't be on another spot because of the street name of it's location. I visited this location within a week after it's invasion.
The location of this one can be seen here.
Date of invasion: 29/05/2011 (First seen on Flickr on 03/06/2011 by Tofz4u)
[Photo taken 7 days after invasion]
Someone's been having fun with a paint-roller by the looks of it. Judging by the location I'd say "art" students from Bower Ashton...
A monkey uses patterned paint to decorate the walls of Banksy's Cans Festival in a tunnel underneath Waterloo Station.
The top of Paterson Pass Road: one of the most beautiful Bay Area landmarks,
with the wind farms. Here the Paint Roller effect was faded - it's not obvious but it gives more punch to the image.
i don't know why, but i guess it's necessary to paint over windows with some kind of protective substance before one cleans the face of a building. we had no idea these guys were going to do this and i kept catching myself thinking we were in a blizzard for the next couple days. very weird
Mitte
unknown
Köpenikerstr. 39
"
next to the Faile wall
Paintroller, Spraycan
Sky
[This picture is part of a documentation project called "DeTour"]