View allAll Photos Tagged wire
Yeah - that's what they are. Taken on a chilly windy morning on the South Side of Peoria as part of a small flickr meetup. Something had to get me out.
I guess you just know where you should stop taking pictures sometimes. During a walk around a lake I arrived at the dam, and something told me just not to walk any farther.
A complementing piece shown on "31 days of bridal bouquets": floraldesignbyjacquelineahne.wordpress.com/2010/03/09/931...
While you're at it check out our website for more corsages and boutonnieres!
Check out our blog on Picking Prom Flowers! (for the guys!) floraldesignbyjacquelineahne.wordpress.com/2010/05/12/pic...
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More at my art site: rsmithings.com
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The title for this piece came to me in one of the most intense dreams I've had lately. I completed the composition earlier in the day, but couldn't arrive at a proper title. So while sleeping, this phrase is something two characters say to each other as a means of affirming their aspirations. One says to the other, who is an aspiring inventor, "Wired to heaven - patents." And the inventor says to the other, "Wired to heaven - art." I'm really not sure where that came from or its significance, but I like the context and think it works for this composition, with trees snapped at sunset forming the background for an overlay of what they can be used for (the boards), and an element of nature that makes its home in the trees. The feather I found in my front yard months ago; the boards are the back of my garage, and the trees are a few miles from my home. See the source components here,
Whilst waiting on The Street in Aylmerton last Tuesday I looked up to see this web of wires and immediately thought of Flickr friend Les.
I used two gauges of wire to create my insect. I made his basic frame with the heavier wire and "scribbled" with the lighter weight wire.
These pictures are from Melissa Manley's Class Insecta workshop at ArtFest.
Birds on wires;
Aprelevka, Moskovskaya oblast, Russia;
55°32'58" N 37°5'0" E;
Leica V-Lux 3, 1/2000 sec, f/6,3, 93 mm, ISO 200, -1.33 EV
এক টুকরো বিশাল আকাশ,
তারমাঝেই মেঘের বাস,
ঝঞ্জালে মাখা সেই আকাশের,
চলছে শুধু নাভিশ্বাস,
যান্ত্রিকতার অভিশাপে,
নির্মল স্বচ্ছতা ফাঁসে,
তারপরও কষ্টে থাকা আকাশে,
নীলেরা ভাসে,সাদা মেঘেরা হাসে,
সেই সুখেদের একমুঠো নীল,
থাকুক সদা তোমার পাশে...
Wire wool inside a whisk attached to rope and spun. Taken during an evening out with Garforth Camera Club at the skate park in Garforth. Three pictures stacked on top of each other and the hue changed to create the different colours.
Shortly after this picture was taken, slightly less shortly after this situation was discovered by Brian, Brian pulled all my wires out and organized them with zip ties and nerd magic. Looking at this photo, I'm actually kind of proud of my PC for never catching on fire.
Three sets of tracks head toward Folsom and El Dorado Hills. The paired electric line is the Sacramento Light Rail while the third line on the right is the former SP Placerville Branch, now a UP industrial lead that ends at the Hazel Light Rail station. The yellow approach signal is for the switch where tracks merge to form single track for the remainder of the line out to Folsom. The red signal in the distance is a stop indication at that switch for an approaching westbound movement. The UP branch services Schnitzer Steel in the distance, a metals recycling operation, that has been moving weekly carloads of scrap metal. The west-facing switch requires a run around move on tracks just west of Hazel Ave. The weekly turn runs on Monday afternoon.
i don't know why i were crazied about the harch wire.,, maybe i don't know,, maybe i just wanta try to find another beauty of them, maybe the silhouette or other ways.
也許我對鐵絲網的迷戀還不會停止
Wire wrapped lavender beach glass pendant, hanging from hand forged sterling silver that has been wire wrapped with seed pearls, silver seahorse and finished off with sea shells and a hand made clasp.
An electrical pole in my neighborhood. Too many people in too small of space. Everything ends up wired together
Wire has many uses. It forms the raw material of many important manufacturers, such as the wire-net industry, wire-cloth making and wire-rope spinning, in which it occupies a place analogous to a textile fiber. Wire-cloth of all degrees of strength and fineness of mesh is used for sifting and screening machinery, for draining paper pulp, for window screens, and for many other purposes.
Vast quantities of aluminium, copper, nickel and steel wire are employed for telephone and data wires and cables, and as conductors in electric power transmission, and heating. It is in no less demand for fencing, and much is consumed in the construction of suspension bridges, and cages, etc. In the manufacture of stringed musical instruments and scientific instruments wire is again largely used. Among its other sources of consumption it is sufficient to mention pin and hair-pin making, the needle and fish-hook industries, nail, peg and rivet making, and carding machinery; indeed there are few industries into which it does not enter.