View allAll Photos Tagged rust
Dressed in a crinkly dark brown reclaimed leather coat, my name is Rust. I’m made for you to tell your stories, share your secrets, deepest loves, passions and little sketches on life.
To open my thick worn cover flap is to reveal my cover design, a silver ox plated brass stamping cut-out oval frame measuring 44 x 30mm, which has been hand antiqued & stitched with linen thread. Inside the little hollow you can peak through to a snippet of my first page.
I am filled with 80 sheets (160 pages) of heavy weight drawing paper which has been hand-torn and tea-stained for an olde worldly appearance. You’ll find my pages are suitable for drawing, painting, sketching & writing. I begin with a tiny resized, reprinted antique envelope that was sent from Italy to Christchurch in 1895. The stamps have a rusty orange hue which is echoed in my archival linen thread with which I am hand bound.
Measuring 3 x 4 ¼ inches, I’m an adorable little journal ready for a home.
A little minimalism today. The snow keeps falling around here, so I figured a little blue sky was in order.
Or a rust creature of some kind... found this in the Florida Keys when driving around with Ben looking for photo ops. The second story of a two-story-single-room apartment structure had burned itself hollow.
What this thing was originally, I have no clue.
I was on the fence about posting this pic. It's interesting, but so busy that there isn't a strong focus.
The Flickr Lounge: Weekly theme: Beauty of rust
A detail of the Mimico creek pedestrian bridge. The background is trees, bushes and berries.
Guardrail that is not galvanized will eventually rust even though it is painted. This may be a low cost solution, but in the long run you pay for it.
A collection of rusted trucks alongside Highway 41 between Atascadero and Morro Bay CA, 21 March 2017.
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. Matthew 6:19
A retired skunk train from Fort Bragg, CA. The Skunk line runs 40 miles from Fort Bragg on the coast to Willits on US Highway 101. Along the way, the tracks cross some 30 bridges and trestles and pass through two deep mountain tunnels. The half-way point of Northspur is popular lunch spot, giving passengers a chance to snack before continuing to Willits or heading back to Fort Bragg.
Here is a link to info on the skunk train.