View allAll Photos Tagged treehouse
Inspired by the show, Treehouse Masters, I made a lucky minifig child an ultimate treehouse. Complete with a sink, coffee cup, arm chair, loft with writing nook, and amazing views.
The treehouse is modular in a sense that it can be split- truck and house- although a trunk runs throughout the whole structure.
The lucky minifig, Jimmy, is now the king of his town's youngsters!
Gear:
Nikon D5100, Nikor 18-55 VR
Location:
near the Alberner harbor (Vienna)
Photo:
HDR with 3 shots,
merged and tone mapped with Photomatix and some rework with Gimp
Treehouse Treasures is the perfect place for children’s gifts. Ranging from upstairs treasures such as children’s bedding and room decor to downstairs treasures such as books, games and customized toys, we meet all of your children's treehouse needs.
Facit has been commissioned to design and fabricate a hotel in the trees located in the grounds of the grand Georgian mansion Harptree Court near Bristol.
Book your stay here www.canopyandstars.co.uk/find-a-place/harptree-court/the-...
Photo: Mark Bolton
Red/Cyan 3D glasses required for viewing.
Color Version:
The treehouse was taken in Annapolis (2007). I combined it with an image of my deck railing (2007) containing some leftover acorn shells, the remnants of a hungry squirrel.
The frame was flat but I brought it into SPM just to add about 3 pixels worth of depth for effect, not to be used as a Floating Window.
Workflow: fav.me/d5jfqpk
In this little imaginary society it is a status symbol to live on high places. Everyone does his best to overcome the others, even if it means building houses on not-so-stable trees and cliffs.
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the best thing about matheran is that there is almost nothing to do here. no tv, no cellphones. lovely music collection, books, board games, all provided at the hotel.
so i'm building the platform for the floor joists for the The World’s Most Awesome Treehouse(s) out of really big and heavy treated 2x10s a the problem arises. how exactly am i supposed to hoist the two "sistered" fourteen foot 2x10s that make up the ends of the platform twelve feet in the air so i can attach them to the sixteen foot 2x10 joists?
i had attempted to recruit a small army of strapping, oldish men to help me out, but we got rained out last weekend and i just wanted to make some progress without having to coordinate another work party.
"easy!", i thought. i'll use a pulley and counter-weight the boards with a trash can loaded with about 250 pounds of paving bricks that i just happen to have laying around ( i just knew they'd be useful for something! ) and pull the two fourteen foot 2x10s that are screwed together up twelve feet and nail in the joists.
what could possibly go wrong?
so, i hauled the trash can up the ladder precariously perched against the tree, and wound the pulley rope through the handles and around the can and started loading it with pavers. after putting in about 250 pounds worth of pavers in the trash can it started dropping and the fourteen foot 2x10s quickly started to raise up to the required height! awesome!
whem it was just about where i needed it to be, i realized i still had to climb back up the ladder and huff and puff to get it up and over the 3/4" threaded rod that's holding up the supports that the joists will run along.
creeeaaaaaak. the handle on the trash can started to give way and the rope started to unwind and loosen while i'm standing 12 feet up on a ladder trying to "man handle" a couple hundred pounds of treated lumber.
all too slowly it dawned on me that if the rope gave out completely i probably wouldn't be able to keep holding on to the boards and they'd fall down the ladder and take me out. hard. double hard.
uh. oh.
luckily i summoned the strength to hoist the boards over the threaded rod and rigged the slack in the rope to hold them in place while i quickly screwed in a couple of joists.
phew. but still. a close call.