View allAll Photos Tagged woodenframes
Temporary art installation at the Rotterdam Oostplein ("East Square"), at the location where once stood windmill "De Noord".
Rotterdam.nl: (in Dutch) Stoepmakersoostplein (in Dutch)
Happy Sliders Sunday!
From inside, on the first floor of the building, the left window of the prison. (See photo below)
The Old Jail Museum-Jim Thorpe, PA
ACCESS EVENT: 12.05.25 - 08.06.25
ZEROICHI: WOODEN FRAME BACKDROP FATPACK - includes Barricade fence, construction helmet, Tsuruhashi
DURA: B135 FATPACK w/ STYLING & TEXTURE HUD
OSCAR LUXURYPACK (shorts & shirt) - Gianni, Jake, Kario, Legacy @ GUILTY MAINSTORE
****Check out my BLOG in profile for Full SLURLs****
I painted this miniature probably in the 90s, not sure. When I still had good eyes :)
The painted area is about 2 1/2 x 2 " so I cropped the frame a bit. It looks more pleasing though with the frame intact. I have used the "painting" in below zoom call image and find it looks nicer that way. I can't remember why I painted this, I think I was always meddling with colours in some form or fashion
For Thursday Doors Days
Atelier under construction at the former factory terrain of Philips electronics, Eindhoven, Netherlands. Reminded me a bit of the work of Dutch artist Piet Mondriaan :-)
The wooden framework in the foreground is the remains of where Smugglers restaurant used to stand in the waters of Carrickfergus harbour.
An unusual photo for me. I was up on the Marlborough Downs shooting the sunset when I stumbled on these wooded frames. I assume they were put there to deter motorbikes from using the footpath.
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Saint-Émilion
Bordeaux, France
June 2024
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Seen in the Kittenberger adventure gardens in Schiltern, Woodquarter, Lower Austria.
Thanks very much for visiting, favs and comments !
The beautiful Old School House now a proud home at the bottom of Stalisfield and Hillside Valley. A mish-mash of peg tiles, flint, wooden frame wattle and daub and local lime washed brick nestled in the Kent countryside as seen on a cycle ride from Faversham to Charing Heath......Now a few days off so planning the next ride for tomorrow.
Hello pasta, my old friend
I've come to cook you up again
Because a vision softly creeping
Told me that I should be eating
Some penne, with a tasty pasta sauce
Why of course
The sound of pasta cooking.
In several pots upon the range
I slaved away as if deranged
'Neath the halo of a stove lamp
The pasta quickly went from to dry to damp
When my arm was splashed by a sudden water burst
I yelled and cursed
The sound echoed in silence.
And in the naked light, I saw
Some fallen sausage on the floor
No longer was it really safe to eat
So I grabbed the dirty sausage meat
And threw it, in a close-by garbage bin
Was I thinkin’
I pondered that in silence.
"Fools" said I, "You do not know
Pasta cooks best low and slow
Hear my words that I might teach you
Make thick sauce, don’t use that cheap Ragu"
But alas, they fell under its spell,
They liked the smell
And cooked their sauce in silence.
And the people bowed and prayed
To the penne that I made
They took their forks and they just dug in
Even though it was a mortal sin
To eat penne, without fresh parmesan, not from a can
And satisfied their stomachs rumbling.
We're Here looks at Food & Art (in this case Art Garfunkel)
(apologies to Paul Simon for "butchering" his classic song The Sounds of Silence)
Shaken not stirred.
The Water Poet pub, closed down April 2019 the area will now forcibly be demolished for office space.
LR2792
Entrance/Exit, one of a number with varying coloured tiling.
Note the original steel framed Crittall windows. This building has Grade ll Listed status.
LR4088 © Joe O'Malley 2021
Typical timber framing, often seen in medieval buildings across Europe, is characterized by a construction method where a wooden framework is visible. Wooden beams and posts create a skeleton structure, and the spaces between them are filled with materials like wattle and daub, plaster, or bricks. This building style highlights the wooden framework, giving it a rustic and distinctive appearance. Timber framing is especially common in countries such as Germany, France, and England, and is often associated with charming historical villages and towns.
Will be away for a couple of weeks (working). Will catch up with you all soon after. A good week-end to all.
Nature was really taking over this house in the village of Smithdale, PA. It's a 1,232 square feet structure built in 1900. Since this photo was taken, the house has been updated with new green shutters, new downspouts, and painted. But it is still abandoned.
An old blue painted wooden window in Port Issac with a colourful selection of teapots on the window ledge.
September 2017
The base of an old bridge pier with it's wooden frame. Constructed in the late 19th century and demolished about 60 years ago, it's still relatively well preserved in the old Cornwall Canal. Notice the aspen tree growing out of the cement blocks.
We paired the Laowa 24mm Probe Lens with our Prizmo Stick RGBW+T LED Wand Light to shoot this unique miniature barn frame.
Click here to see how we did it: www.youtube.com/shorts/A9UZMFiIAFo
Prizmo Stick: fotodioxpro.com/products/pzm-st512
We paired the Laowa 24mm Probe Lens with our Prizmo Stick RGBW+T LED Wand Light to shoot this unique miniature barn frame.
Click here to see how we did it: www.youtube.com/shorts/A9UZMFiIAFo
Prizmo Stick: fotodioxpro.com/products/pzm-st512
Purple haze, all in my brain
Lately things they don't seem the same
Actin' funny, but I don't know why
Excuse me while I kiss the sky
Purple Haze - Jimi Hendrix
We're Here looks at Inverted today.
I took this photo at the Christmas market on Goetheplatz in Frankfurt.
I focused on the warm glow of the old-fashioned light bulbs, with the blurred golden lights in the background creating a soft, festive feel.
Imagine my surprise that a revival of "spaghetti westerns" was in the works for theatrical release only. The first movie is A Fistful of Pasta, followed by For a Few Penne More and finally The Good, the Bad and the Rotini. All bound to be classics. Can hardly wait!
\We're Here looks at Spaghetti Westerns today. BTW, the font I used is called Eastwood, believe it or not.
PADDY: "So this is a painting called 'Boulevard Poissonnière in the Rain' by the famous French artist Jean Béraud."
SCOUT: "Oh yes, I can see it's raining, Paddy. The ladies and the gentleman on the street have their brollies up. Oh! Hurry home horsies and get dry! The poor horsies don't have umbrellas."
PADDY: "Jean Béraud was a famous Impressionist painter who incorporated fine details along with social realism."
SCOUT: "At least because it's raining, there are no window lickers at the shop windows."
PADDY: "Scout, like I said before, in French, window shopping is called ‘lèche vitrine’ which translates to English literally as ‘window licking’. However, Parisians don't actually lick the windows when they are window shopping."
SCOUT: "That is just as well, Paddy, because the windows would be dirty! Yucky!" *Sticks out little pink bear tongue.*
PADDY: "Oh! Hullo everyone! Do you know what? Monday the 15th of April is World Art Day. World Art Day is an international celebration of the fine arts which was declared by the International Association of Art in order to promote awareness of creative activity worldwide. We are celebrating this day by looking at this lovely painting, 'Boulevard Poissonnière in the Rain' painted by the famous French Impressionist artist Jean Béraud around 1880 which is on display as part of the Bendigo Art Gallery's exhibition ‘Paris: Impressions of Life 1880 – 1925’."
SCOUT: “Paddy? Paddy!"
PADDY: "Yes Scout?"
SCOUT: "Since today is World Art Day, I have a question, Paddy.”
PADDY: “And what is that, Scout?”
SCOUT: “Well, if this painting was done in Paris in the very olden days, how come he painted it in colour when the world was black and white? Wasn’t the world black and white there too, or was that only in England where you and Daddy lived, Paddy?”
PADDY: “Scout, I keep telling you, Scout. The world wasn't black and white then, only the telly, and there were no tellies in 1880s France."
SCOUT: "Then why are all the photos in this exhibition black and white, Paddy? Tell me that?"
PADDY: "It's because they only had black and white film then, Scout. Colour film wasn't invented until the 1930s."
SCOUT: "Well, I'll just have to take your word for that, Paddy. Unlike you, I am young and beautiful, being five years old, whereas you and Daddy are ancient, from the days when the world was black and white. I think you might be fibbing, Paddy." *Giggles.*
PADDY: *Sighs.* "Happy World Art Day everyone and everybear!"
This weekend just gone, Paddy, Scout and I went to the Bendigo Art Gallery to view the ‘Paris: Impressions of Life 1880 – 1925’ exhibition. Exclusive to Bendigo Art Gallery, the ‘Paris: Impressions of Life 1880–1925’ exhibition takes visitors on a journey through the lively and picturesque streets of historic Paris. Tour seven themed pathways and discover artisan street signs, historic couture, decorative arts, and everyday ephemera alongside paintings by artists including Jean Béraud, the pre-eminent painter of Parisian life in the Belle Époque, Maurice Utrillo and Paul Signac, pioneer of the artistic technique of pointillism, as well as vibrant graphic prints by Toulouse-Lautrec and his contemporaries.
This painting, 'Boulevard Poissonnière in the Rain' was painted by the famous French Impressionist artist Jean Béraud around 1880. Jean Béraud was a French painter renowned for his numerous paintings depicting the life of Paris, and the nightlife of Paris society. Pictures of the Champs Elysees, cafés, Montmartre and the banks of the Seine are precisely detailed illustrations of everyday Parisian life during the Belle Époque.
My Paddington Bear came to live with me in London when I was two years old (many, many years ago). He was hand made by my Great Aunt and he has a chocolate coloured felt hat, the brim of which had to be pinned up by a safety pin to stop it getting in his eyes. The collar of his mackintosh is made of the same felt. He wears wellington boots made from the same red leather used to make the toggles on his mackintosh.
He has travelled with me across the world and he and I have had many adventures together over the years. He is a very precious member of my small family.
Scout was a gift to Paddy from my friend. He is a Fair Trade Bear hand knitted in Africa. His name comes from the shop my friend found him in: Scout House. He tells me that life was very different where he came from, and Paddy is helping introduce him to many new experiences. Scout catches on quickly, and has proven to be a cheeky, but very lovable member of our closely knit family.