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IKEA Planning Studio, Ikea, June, Manhattan, New York City, Planning Studio, midtown, New York, United States of America
Studio tdes moved to MSK JR Apartment in December 2008.
This photo is by studio tdes. You’re welcome to use it. We like to share.
Please link to us: thedailyenglishshow.com
Details on how to credit us: thedailyenglishshow.com/photo-credits
Lots of nice light, Kutrimmer table top cutter, work table, paper storage etc.
Pearson Studio 2005-2010
Taken last night 18/11/2011 in Hazel's studio.My granddaughter Millie. I would like to thank Hazel the use of her studio and her help, i am very grateful. Thanks also to Pete for his help in the editing. Hope you like it and thanks for looking.
Here's my little studio in the woods where I create my lampwork beads. I just love spending time out here. It's my great escape!
May 15, 2019 - "The project, known as Taliesin—Welsh for “shining brow”—consisted of a house with a living room, kitchen, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, sitting room, and garden; studio with a workroom and small apartment; and service wing with stalls for horses, a garage, space designated for carriages and cows, and a milk room. It was located close to other projects Wright designed for members of his family, including the Romeo and Juliet tower (1897); Hillside Home School (1902); and Tan-y-deri (1907), the house Wright built for his sister, Jane Porter.
Like the suburban Prairie-style residences of his early career, Taliesin featured hipped roofs, overhanging eaves, broad chimneys, an open floor plan, and bands of casement windows. The rolling topography of Southern Wisconsin allowed Wright to expand upon his earlier experiments linking site and structure. Here Wright responded to the natural landscape by building Taliesin around a hill top. The architect wrote, “I knew well that no house should ever be on a hill or on anything. It should be of the hill. Belonging to it. Hill and home should live together each the happier for the other.” Indeed, Taliesin was situated to create picturesque views of distant hills and valleys, as well as nearby landscaped gardens. The multiple facets of its hipped roofs appear to follow the contours of the landscape, and Wright chose to build with limestone and other materials native to the area.
Taliesin’s living quarters were tragically destroyed when a disgruntled employee set fire to the property and killed Mamah Borthwick, her two children, and four others on August 15, 1914. Wright subsequently rebuilt the structure, and it was incorporated into a larger estate that is now open to the public." Previous text from the following website: flwright.org/researchexplore/wrightbuildings/taliesin
Decorating cookies with facial expressions in the Creativity Studio.
On October 10, 2014, the Museum hosted a members and sponsors preview event for the opening of “XOXO: An Exhibit About Love & Forgiveness.”
“XOXO” is an exhibit where families can come together in a place that fosters conversations and interactive experiences that bring love and forgiveness to the forefront of families’ minds.
“XOXO” was created by Children's Museum of Pittsburgh with support from The Fetzer Institute. DuPage Children’s Museum is the first museum to host the traveling exhibit after its first installation at Children’s Museum of Pittsburgh.
Photo by DCM staff Sherry Johnson.
Séance Studio au club Photo.
Strobist Info : 2 back lights (400W) 2 front light (800W) one at the left with a softbox
PostProd : LightRoom & Photoshop
My workspace is in my loft/live/workspace. I need more tables and storage/shelves, though I do use part of my dining table for drawing and watercolors.