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One of my out takes from the weekend. I love these colourful chairs and crates featured at one of our local cafes!
Located at Lake Horton, a large-ish lake not far from home. There are a few of these, very nice looking tables, so much nicer than wood. It was a delight to catch the light at this moment today.
Our Daily Challenge: Begins with P
We have 70 tables overlooking the harbor. Take your pick...
Key West Harbor ~ Key West, Florida ~ The Florida Keys
[only kidding... this is late, late at night after all the restaurants
and bars have closed and have issued their last call for alcohol!
We took a last stroll down at the harbor before retiring to our
hotel room... such a fun night. Never gets old. Love Key West!]
My son took shop class for the first time this year, and it has changed him in all kinds of great ways. A great craftperson for a teacher, and a great long term project: building this table, from cutting the wood to making the joins to sanding and treating it. The table is beautiful, and so is the kind of teacher who gets a fifteen year old boy this happy about something that took him a few months to build.
Copyright © Marc Ottolini All rights reserved
Contax 167MT (1986)
Zeiss Planar 50mm/1.7
Kodachrome 200 - Nikon Coolscan V ED
Website : www.marcottolini.net/
Just bought this dining table for my sister's new house. Hopefully I can get a real photo of it soon.
The client wanted a new top made out of local wood to replace an electric blue, veneered particle board top.
I found several pieces of Cherry from Lancaster County, Pennsylvania; about a hundred miles away.
The top is 60" by 36" and 1 3/8" thick made from three laminated boards. I rabbeted the edges of the top so that it appears to be only 7/8" thick.
The extra, hidden thickness will add to the stability of the top without changing the overall height of the table.
I could have built the frame, too; it is the same 1 1/2" square steel tube which was a staple of my old scene shop.
The table in the raised position. More photos in the album.
Detailed Description: forum.puzzler.su/viewtopic.php?f=35&t=14096
Antique Chinese Coffee Table
Probably once a taller table shortened to become a coffee table. (Coffee tables did not exist in China of yesteryear.) This antique Chinese table features interesting rounded leg extenders and curved aprons between each of the legs. The flying spandrels are at each corner. The rounded legs coordinate with the rounded leg extenders. Light brown finish allows the wood grain to be revealed. www.silkroadcollection.com/li1010y-antique-asian-coffee-t...
MORE INFO:
Solid top table
Shown with 4 Metro side chairs with wood seats
Available in other stains, paints, sizes & woods!
There have been a lot of changes going on with my normal routine lately. Since purchasing a house and moving out of a tiny apartment, I'm now living 45 minutes from the beach instead of 25 minutes. Regardless though, a little extra distance isn't enough to keep me away from something I love so much. California's coast is undoubtedly some of the most beautiful scenery in the world, and I'm on a mission to photography it all, from San Diego on the south end to to Pelican State Beach below the Oregon border.
On this evening I continued my trek into south Laguna to a little place called Table Rock Beach. Some photographers guard their photo locations like its the holy grail, which I think is freakin' absurd. This beach is located off of Table Rock Drive and Pacific Coast Highway. You won't find it on the map when searching for Table Rock Beach, but I assure you it's there and there are signs at its entrance to let you know you're in the right place. Don't bother trying to park on Table Rock Drive. You'll need to park on Coast Highway and walk. Like many beaches throughout Laguna, there are a lot of steps you need to go down (and unfortunately back up) to get to it. Be sure you're in good shape before going because your legs are going to thank you for this, and by thank I mean scream what the heck were you thinking, by the time you get back up to your car.
Surprisingly, this is the first shot I fired off that evening. After I loaded my photos from this session into lightroom, I briefly glanced at the others and rejected the whole rest of the set. This was supposed to be my initial test shot to see what settings I wanted to use and I nailed it on the first try. All I did was I mounted my reverse graduated neutral density filter onto my lens, set my aperture to f18 to capture the sun star, and fired off a shot at 1/60th of a second. Later that evening the cloud formations mostly disappeared making the available light and the sky look rather dull. Photography is so much about being in the right place at the right time that it makes the camera gear secondary. You can have the most expensive gear money can buy but if you don't put yourself in front of beautiful scenery, you're still going to capture dull photographs.
This photo was taken at the Casa do Alentejo restaurant in Lisbon, Portugal. The walls were adorned with beautiful tiled panels (or azulejos) and they serve wonderful hearty dishes from the Alentejo region of Portugal. It is housed on the second floor of a beautiful Moorish style building that serves as a social and cultural center. Taken with a Panasonic Lumix G10
for odc2 - on the table
I have photographed these things on the table separately... i know it's bit cluttered...by I like cluttered ;)
Zoe moved half of her circular IKEA bed into our living room while she's subletting. For a while it was just sitting there together as a single unit, until Ben thought it would be funny to shift the pieces apart and have them like armrests while you sat between them on the floor. After Ben left, I didn't shift them back together, and that got me to thinking that what would be even cooler would be to have a table there! So dad and I threw one together this weekend. Just needs some final sanding and stain (I've got a darkish red oak stain).