View allAll Photos Tagged pegboard
This weekend, we started settling into our new art studio and bringing it to life, with the help of our maker art friends. Sarah moved boxes with art supplies, Mark helped set up the pegboards, Howard filled them with tools, Natalina decorated the shed, Jean set up an art bench and Phyllis treated us to fresh fruit.
It felt like an old-fashioned community barn raising! I am very lucky to have such a supportive group of friends, and am really grateful for all their hard work and creative touches.
Our new backyard makerspace is a wooden 12’ x 10’ Tuff Shed, made to order, opening into our patio. It will be a great place to make art with friends, prepare for my classes and work on new ‘pataphysical projects.
I’m so happy to finally have an open space to create in, after decades of clutter in my overcrowded office. Can’t wait to start making cool things in it!
View more photos of our art studio as it develops:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670244673286
Learn more about my maker art projects:
Store #245, 16 Main Ave; the interior of the former Clifton CVS, which opened in 1975 and closed in late 2018. With the higher pegboard removed the original walls are visible; originally the wall shelving was much lower with "billboards" (wall-size ads) painted above. The wood framing from the 72 inch pegboard, which was added by the early 90s, is still up.
Asbestos-cement sample labeled as "Acoustic Panel", "Made in Canada". Also known as "perforated" transite panels in the U.S.
This particular material has also been described (incorrectly) as "pegboard", in reference to a similar-looking application using metal hooks to hang tools and other items, but made from pressed cellulosic materials; "hardboard" or "Masonite".
Oddly enough, have seen perforated asbestos-cement panels used as "pegboard". However, this material can be typically found in areas where sound control was desired, such as: telephone booths/stations, sound booths, noise testing chambers, ceiling panels, workshops, cafeterias, auditorium walls, rehearsal halls, sound stages, band/choir rooms, etc.
If you use this texture, please credit me with a link back to this page.
Feel free to post samples (small) of your works using this texture - I'd love to see them.
To download:
- click on the "All Sizes" button above the photo
- click on "Original"
- click on "Download the Original size"
My pegboard is located behind the door, but I have quick and easy access to many of my sewing/crafting items.
This is the pegboard I installed to the left of the work desk. I keep planning t paint it some nice, perky color, but I have not gotten to it yet.
Example of painted perforated asbestos cement acoustic wall paneling showing an area of damage, which seems to demonstrate the fibrous nature of the material. This looks like standard "pegboard", but in this case utilized as sound deadening wall panels.
It's gonna take a pound of incense to clean my mind of the memories of the sight of those plastic babies with their shapes of deformed pairs of lips sticking out from the tops of their ghastly heads. Gerber is babyfood, ew are people supposed to spoon Gerber onto the dolls.
Hot Wheels & Pan Am Airlines pouch & the infamous Star Trek issue of Young Miss Magazine & American flag dress & "White Nights" ballet movie & "Cat Stevens Foreigner" & Electric Light Orchestra "Time" album incl. the ridiculous song "Twilight" which you might want to be careful around because it might get stuck in your head.
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In downtown South Charleston, West Virginia, on July 20th, 2010, inside the "Mound Antique Mall" on the west side of D Street, north of 6th Avenue.
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Library of Congress classification ideas:
NK4894.3.B33 Baby dolls—Pictorial works.
RJ216 Gerber Products Company—Pictorial works.
HF5482 Secondhand trade—United States—Pictorial works.
NK1133.28 Antiques business—United States—Pictorial works.
GT3031 Incense—Pictorial works.
F249.S69 South Charleston (W. Va. )—Pictorial works.
My girl wanted me to photograph her in her garage by her pegboard. In case you are wondering what this is all about, see what Leslie Anne did a while back: www.flickr.com/photos/leslie_anne_007/8239210615/in/photo... . She comes up with some very creative ideas that blow my mind and touch my heart.
This weekend, we started settling into our new art studio and bringing it to life, with the help of our maker art friends. Sarah moved boxes with art supplies, Mark helped set up the pegboards, Howard filled them with tools, Natalina decorated the shed, Jean set up an art bench and Phyllis treated us to fresh fruit.
It felt like an old-fashioned community barn raising! I am very lucky to have such a supportive group of friends, and am really grateful for all their hard work and creative touches.
Our new backyard makerspace is a wooden 12’ x 10’ Tuff Shed, made to order, opening into our patio. It will be a great place to make art with friends, prepare for my classes and work on new ‘pataphysical projects.
I’m so happy to finally have an open space to create in, after decades of clutter in my overcrowded office. Can’t wait to start making cool things in it!
View more photos of our art studio as it develops:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670244673286
Learn more about my maker art projects:
This is a view of the router and modem mounted beneath the desk surface. Used 18 gauge wire to secure them to the pegboard. The wooden block was wood-glue to the undersurface of the desk to slightly elevate the main desk surface. I then screwed the leg mounts to these blocks.
This weekend, we started settling into our new art studio and bringing it to life, with the help of our maker art friends. Sarah moved boxes with art supplies, Mark helped set up the pegboards, Howard filled them with tools, Natalina decorated the shed, Jean set up an art bench and Phyllis treated us to fresh fruit.
It felt like an old-fashioned community barn raising! I am very lucky to have such a supportive group of friends, and am really grateful for all their hard work and creative touches.
Our new backyard makerspace is a wooden 12’ x 10’ Tuff Shed, made to order, opening into our patio. It will be a great place to make art with friends, prepare for my classes and work on new ‘pataphysical projects.
I’m so happy to finally have an open space to create in, after decades of clutter in my overcrowded office. Can’t wait to start making cool things in it!
View more photos of our art studio as it develops:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670244673286
Learn more about my maker art projects:
This is a sprite from "Castlevania: Symphony of the Night" for PS.
It is 20.5" wide by 12.75" tall. It used 3,740 beads and 11 pegboards.
It is made with Perler/Hama/Nabbi fuse beads.
I made it on October 19, 2010.
Telefonzentrale:
Hier gut zu sehen, wie die diensthabende Schwester der Telefonzentrale am Tag (nachts auch) jeden wichtigen Rufeingang notiert und die Stecktafel der Diensthabenden im Blick hat und gleichzeitig den "Funknotruf" (weißer Kasten) sowie das "Knopfverbindungspult" zu den Stationen und Ambulanzen, Labor, Röntgen etc. Links das schwarze Telefon nur für die Telefonzentrale: Chefarztverbindungen bzw. Oberärzte, dann ein "alter Einheitenzähler" für Auslandstelefonate mit Schlüssel zur 0-Stellung. Daneben halb zu sehen: Direkte Verbindung zur Feuerwehrzentrale und zu allen Notrufen der Stadt (auch zum Bottroper Knappschaftskrankenhaus).
Weiße Tafeln (Kästchen) zeigten an, wo gerade gesprochen wird und mit wem, nötigenfalls konnte man das Gespräch unterbrechen und "dazwischengehen".
Oben: Kontroll-Uhrzeit, darunter "optische Warnung" z.B. Feuer, Heizung etc. Im gleichen Raum war auch der Alarm für den Notstromaggregator.
Telephone switchboard:
Here you can clearly see how the nurse on duty at the switchboard notes down every important incoming call during the day (at night too) and keeps an eye on the duty nurse's pegboard and at the same time the "radio emergency call" (white box) as well as the "button connection desk" to the wards and outpatient departments, laboratory, X-ray, etc. On the left, the black telephone for the switchboard only: chief physician connections or senior physicians, then an "old unit counter" for international calls with a key for the 0 position. Half visible next to it: Direct connection to the fire station and to all emergency calls in the city (also to the Bottrop miners' hospital).
White panels (boxes) showed where the call was being made and to whom; if necessary, you could interrupt the call and "intervene".
Above: Control time, below "visual warning" e.g. fire, heating etc. The alarm for the emergency generator was also in the same room.
In the past we hung the dog's leash and harness here, and in summer a cooling bandana. Those are still here, but the pegboard is dominated by masks.
Our Daily Challenge: GEN Z & CHANGE
This is the space where I create. It's divided into 2 parts - the design and inspiration side and the tool and creating side. I reused whatever I could. Tins and cigar boxes hold stones, mason jars hold found objects. An antique oak dresser with a formica countertop placed on top makes perfect wet station. Vintage school desks are heavy bottomed, perfect for rolling mill. Antique frames hold pegboards. Rolling carts can be used to gate off the tool area when children are in the area. I have a beautiful view of a forest. I regret I didn't paint the walls before setting it up. Someday..
This is the space where I create. It's divided into 2 parts - the design and inspiration side and the tool and creating side. I reused whatever I could. Tins and cigar boxes hold stones, mason jars hold found objects. An antique oak dresser with a formica countertop placed on top makes perfect wet station. Vintage school desks are heavy bottomed, perfect for rolling mill. Antique frames hold pegboards. Rolling carts can be used to gate off the tool area when children are in the area. I have a beautiful view of a forest. I regret I didn't paint the walls before setting it up. Someday..
This weekend, we started settling into our new art studio and bringing it to life, with the help of our maker art friends. Sarah moved boxes with art supplies, Mark helped set up the pegboards, Howard filled them with tools, Natalina decorated the shed, Jean set up an art bench and Phyllis treated us to fresh fruit.
It felt like an old-fashioned community barn raising! I am very lucky to have such a supportive group of friends, and am really grateful for all their hard work and creative touches.
Our new backyard makerspace is a wooden 12’ x 10’ Tuff Shed, made to order, opening into our patio. It will be a great place to make art with friends, prepare for my classes and work on new ‘pataphysical projects.
I’m so happy to finally have an open space to create in, after decades of clutter in my overcrowded office. Can’t wait to start making cool things in it!
View more photos of our art studio as it develops:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157670244673286
Learn more about my maker art projects:
new (old ) bathroom cabinet repurposed into display. . . want to add white backdrop. I'm thinking pegboard to make it a two side display