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Frederick Sage & Company Ltd was a global British shopfitting business that had bases in Europe, South Africa and South America. During both WW1 and WW2 the company diversified into aeroplane design and manufacture and this significant badge, with outstanding visual presence, captures the very essence of their aeronautical ventures.

 

During WW1, the Company's aircraft design and making division was responsible for a twin-engined bomber, a biplane-fighter and a biplane-trainer. Once WW1 ended, the company returned to its shopfitting roots and continued uninterrupted until the outbreak of WW2. At this juncture, the Company once again resurrected its aeronautic interests and manufactured parts for the De Havilland Mosquito. At the end of hostilities, Frederick Sage & Co once again returned to its shopfitting and woodworking business by winning the commission to rebuild the interior woodworking of the bombed House of Commons.

 

Throughout its varied past, the Company was responsible for many prestigious interior projects such as the original retail fit-out of Harrods in Knightsbridge and many of the historic shop fronts in Regent Street, Oxford Street and Bond Street.

 

Frederick Sage and Co Ltd was founded in 1860 and was based, until being bombed in 1941, in Grays Inn Road, London.

 

Photography, layout and design: Argy58

 

(This image also exists as a high resolution jpeg and tiff - ideal for a variety of print sizes

e.g. A4, A3, A2 and A1. The current uploaded format is for screen based viewing only: 72pi)

Interior of Myer Dandenong store shortly before the store closing in October 2013. Dandenong Plaza has terminated the store's lease early to convert the space to Aldi, JB-Hi-Fi, Trades Secret and Daiso.

 

The store opened on November 4, 1974 as a four level store but was shrunk to 3 levels with a renovation around 1994 to coincide with the opening of Dandenong Plaza in 1995. Target now occupies the former ground floor.

 

Myer originally owned the building but have leased it since around 1989 - as was the case with other stores in Melbourne.

 

Now-empty section of the ladies fashion department on level 1, after a 75% off sale the previous day, with old shopfittings stacked in place. Prior to the 1994 renovation it was also the ladies fashion department on level 2.

This photo shows work from Octink, London's leading display specialist. You can find out more information at www.octink.com/.

designmarketo.com/blog/2010/06/14/beautiful-crates-from-f...

 

the blue prined wooden ones (in the middle) were used to make the border of the huge kitchen table; the black cardboard's crates became the till

Sartoretto Verna

 

pharmacy shopfitting, pharmacy beauty tratments

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Albert Hall

North Circus Street

Nottingham

 

History

 

The original Albert Hall was started in 1873 as a Nottingham Temperance Hall. Watson Fothergill, a local architect won the commission and the builders were Richard Stevenson and Field Weston.

 

The hall was opened on 26 September 1876[1] by the Mayor of Notitngham even though it was unfinished. The entrance hall and corridors were unfinished, and the gas lighting was of a temporary nature.

 

On completion the building cost around £15,000 (equivalent to £1,338,900 in 2019),[2]. It was the largest concert hall in Nottingham and a major venue for political rallies but it had frequent financial crises. It was put on the market in 1901 and was bought by a syndicate of local businessmen for £8,450 (equivalent to £924,130 in 2019),[2], opening as a Wesleyan Methodist mission in September 1902.

 

Although the outstanding debt was a millstone, the work of the mission went from strength to strength until 22 April 1906, when fire swept through the building.[3] The Methodists then realised that the Hall was under-insured. This time, a prominent local Methodist, Albert Edward Lambert, who had been responsible for Nottingham Midland Station was asked to produce a plan. His new Albert Hall Methodist Mission was built in the style of an Edwardian Theatre or Music Hall and, in the practice of temperance halls, concerts and other events were staged in the building.

 

The new Hall was dedicated on 17 March 1909[4] and officially opened on 15 September 1910[5] by Lady Florence Boot, wife of Jesse Boot of the Boots pharmacy chain. It had cost £40,000 (£4,113,340 in 2019).[2]

 

The Hall continued to be used as a Methodist mission and remained the city's largest concert venue until 1982.[6] The congregation then merged with that at Parliament Street Methodist Church.

 

Nottingham City Council purchased the Albert Hall in 1987 and a major refurbishment was undertaken. A new floor was inserted at the level of the front of the circle to reduce the volume of the main hall, and thus created a new separate ground floor hall. The building was linked with the adjacent Nottingham Playhouse and the bar block of the theatre was updated at the same time to allow the creation of a multipurpose centre. The work was completed in 1988 and Her Royal Highness Diana, Princess of Wales unveiled a plaque on 23 February 1989 to commemorate the refurbishment.

 

The Nottingham Playhouse managed the Albert Hall until July 1990 when the Nottingham City Council leased the building to the Albert Hall Nottingham Ltd for use as a commercial conference and entertainment Venue.

  

Current use

 

Since July 1990 the hall has been commercially run by The Albert Hall Nottingham Ltd. and is used as a conference, banqueting and entertainment venue. The venue comprises the Great Hall and a further 10 conference rooms of varying sizes. The venue attracts a wide variety of local and national conferences, whilst continuing to serve many local orchestras, schools, and voluntary organisations.

  

Organ

 

The organ was built in the Albert Hall Methodist Mission by J.J. Binns in 1909. It cost £4,500 (equivalent to £472,533 in 2019),[2] and was a gift to the City of Nottingham by Jesse Boot, 1st Baron Trent to be known as the City Organ. The Italian and Spanish walnut casework was made in the Boots shopfitting workshop in Nottingham and the carving executed by Fitchett & Woollacott.

 

A full restoration of the organ by Harrison & Harrison under the direction of organ consultant David Butterworth was completed in 1993. The restoration was inspired and financed by the "Binns Organ Company", a local group formed for that purpose.

 

The organ has been awarded a Grade 1 listing by the British Institute of Organ Studies.[12] The Grade 1 listing is for an organ of outstanding historic and musical importance in essentially original condition.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Hall,_Nottingham

THR3 Design incorporated our staggered log tiles into their fantastic scheme for LOKS Bar and Kitchen, Glasgow, which opened in 2014.

Image courtesy of Loks Bar and Kitchen.

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Shopfittings supplier in Manchester's Northern Quarter, cropped and processed as a bit of an homage to Eugène Atget - "Boulevard de Strasbourg, Corsets, Paris, 1912". See - www.sothebys.com/content/dam/stb/lots/N09/N09275/306N0927...

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Shop fitting, Camden, 1980

23i-52: plastic sheet,

 

Much of what people think of as central London is a part of the London borough of Camden and I think this shop being fitted out was somewhere in the area roughly between Trafalgar Square and Monmouth St, and the next frame on the contact sheet (not shown on this site) is in Monmouth St, with the name board for 'Neon' and the 'ghost sign' next door for B Flegg, saddlers. This picture could well also have been in Monmouth St.

 

I walked around this are fairly often when visiting the Photographers' Gallery, then on Great Newport St. In 1980 it acquired a second space a couple of doors down from the original premises. As well as showing some great photography (and particularly in later years some rather less great) it also had a cafe where you could sit and look at one of the shows, as well as meeting people.

 

Somehow it seemed a much friendlier place than the much improved new premises on Ramillies St, and I often met people - staff and other visitors I knew there, and it seemed rather easier to talk with strangers, who were always a part of a wider photographic community.

 

As well as visiting to see the shows, as entry was always free you could drop in while passing for another look - or just to have a coffee or even just use the toilets - I also used to go with some of my pictures to a 'young photographers' group which met regularly there and to which sell-established photographers often dropped in to give their opinions too. Though we learnt much and enjoyed it, these meetings were clearly something the gallery's education officer, who was responsible for them found an ordeal, with much questioning of some of the gallery's practices and more. When London Independent Photography came along in 1987 she clutched to them as a lifebelt to end the group.

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

RAG SHOPPING WALL at the world’s leading retail trade fair:

The RAG SHOPPING WALL, which was developed by Ars Electronica Solutions together with Umdasch Shopfitting, RAG and Samsung, was presented at the EuroShop 2014 in Düsseldorf. The interactive shopping wall has already created quite a media stir and was presented to an audience of international experts.

 

credit: Umdasch

Click the link below to see the full set:

www.flickr.com/photos/yorkline/sets/72157627491055112/

 

Yorkline are market leaders in specialist design and shopfitting. We work extensively with Pharmacies, GP surgeries and Dental surgeries across the whole of the UK. Take a look at our website and see how Yorkline can help your business achieve its full business potential.

 

www.yorkline.co.uk/

Got this one from a shopfitting place, very good glasswork and fittings but slightly wobbly aluminium extrusion frame. I need to tie it back to the wall which will fix that.

 

Largely full of "serious" models. Can't get over how much space a 1/32 Stuka takes up!

We pilled up the black plastic crates - they would later become a kitchen table in our week long popup shop and kitchen in Milan, for the furniture fair 2010.

 

Beautiful crates from FoodMarketo

 

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