View allAll Photos Tagged woodenframes
Day 26
On my home today, I noticed this wooden frame half poking out of the snow and, a bit further from it, these two tires...
I hadn’t taken my image for the day yet, so when I saw the frame and the tire sitting all by its lonesome, i thought “this is perfect!” The background [a foresty area] was all perfect, too: the twigs haphazardly strewn across the snow, a fallen tree off to the side, the sapling [conveniently growing] in front of the tire that was able to support the frame... era muy perfecto.
I spent a delightful Saturday with the Famous Flickr Five+ Group in the Yarra Valley, where we visited the picturesque Alowyn Gardens, which I had never heard of before, before having luncheon at the Yarrawood Winery.
The Alowyn Gardens are just outside Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne, in wine making country. The Alowyn Gardens started as weed and blackberry infested paddocks that were formerly part of a horse stud. The land was cleared in 1997 before revitalisation of the soil was conducted. Two years later in 1999 the first tree was planted. Today the Alowyn Gardens are well established, and provide an informative and educational experience for visitors. It has been designed with shade and comfort in mind. Plant names are on view to educate visitors about the gardens. The gardens have one of the largest Japanese Wisteria arbours as their centrepiece. Off it visitors may wander through seven very different styles of gardens, from the formal to the informal, European to Australian. The Native Garden is based on Australian plantings and features a dam and wetland area for animals, including a profusion of frogs and a great deal of birdlife. The Display Garden is a collection of courtyards and small gardens featuring collections of interesting plantings. The idea of the Display garden is to demonstrate what can be achieved in small spaces. The Edible Garden as the name suggests, shows that kitchen gardens can be beautiful as well as functional with rows of fruit trees, vegetable and medicinal gardens and a number of edible flowers that are both tasty and beautiful. The Birch and Casuarina Forest offers a woodland with enchanting hidden dells and contains a historical miner's hut. The Perennial Border contains herbaceous plants which are tough and hardy, survive with minimal work and are able to cope with Australia's hot summers and cold Yarra Valley winters. The Parterre Garden is based on the 15th Century French Renaissance design principles of low formal hedges formed into patterns. The French Provincial Garden is the largest of all the gardens and is surrounded by avenues of Chinese Elm, Crab Apple and Canadian Maple trees. It has large lawns, and a long water feature that runs the width of the garden.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/7978146957
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Plunging view from the top of the wooden egg.
OpalEssence is the Idaho C.O.R.E. Project. It is an egg made of a wooden frame. More info at www.facebook.com/IdahoCORE
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2012 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
mixed media on cardboard kit-box
collage, graphite, dry pastel marker, ink and spraypaint
57cm x 17cm
2012
Elegant wedding ceremony setup featuring pampas grass in an outdoor location with mountains in the background
I spent a delightful Saturday with the Famous Flickr Five+ Group in the Yarra Valley, where we visited the picturesque Alowyn Gardens, which I had never heard of before, before having luncheon at the Yarrawood Winery.
The Alowyn Gardens are just outside Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne, in wine making country. The Alowyn Gardens started as weed and blackberry infested paddocks that were formerly part of a horse stud. The land was cleared in 1997 before revitalisation of the soil was conducted. Two years later in 1999 the first tree was planted. Today the Alowyn Gardens are well established, and provide an informative and educational experience for visitors. It has been designed with shade and comfort in mind. Plant names are on view to educate visitors about the gardens. The gardens have one of the largest Japanese Wisteria arbours as their centrepiece. Off it visitors may wander through seven very different styles of gardens, from the formal to the informal, European to Australian. The Native Garden is based on Australian plantings and features a dam and wetland area for animals, including a profusion of frogs and a great deal of birdlife. The Display Garden is a collection of courtyards and small gardens featuring collections of interesting plantings. The idea of the Display garden is to demonstrate what can be achieved in small spaces. The Edible Garden as the name suggests, shows that kitchen gardens can be beautiful as well as functional with rows of fruit trees, vegetable and medicinal gardens and a number of edible flowers that are both tasty and beautiful. The Birch and Casuarina Forest offers a woodland with enchanting hidden dells and contains a historical miner's hut. The Perennial Border contains herbaceous plants which are tough and hardy, survive with minimal work and are able to cope with Australia's hot summers and cold Yarra Valley winters. The Parterre Garden is based on the 15th Century French Renaissance design principles of low formal hedges formed into patterns. The French Provincial Garden is the largest of all the gardens and is surrounded by avenues of Chinese Elm, Crab Apple and Canadian Maple trees. It has large lawns, and a long water feature that runs the width of the garden.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/9735035686
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Angel and Pirate making out on the Hands sculpture, by David Gerler.
For more info about the Hands sculpture, go to www.indiegogo.com/projects/hands-a-2013-burning-man-arts-....
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2013 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/9735036014
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
Hands, by David Gerler.
For more info about the Hands sculpture, go to www.indiegogo.com/projects/hands-a-2013-burning-man-arts-....
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2013 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/7978147207
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Inside the base of The Man, the giant installation called "Bee Here Now! " by Gregg Fleishman.
This is an intricate climbable 38′-tall sculpture representing a flower’s pistil. It was constructed without using any nail or screw, just interlocking pieces of plywood cut with great accuracy.
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2012 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
"Dare To Do Right." Embroidery, wool. North American (USA and Canada), late 19th Century AD. Special Exhibit, "Kind Words Can Never Die: A Personal Collection of Victorian Needlework." Textile Museum of Canada. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Copyright 2017, James A. Glazier. While I understand the case the curators make for the historical and social signifiance of commercially-derived works executed by women in the second half of the 19th Century AD in North America, this show still presented the single ugliest and least interesting collection of objects I have ever seen in a museum.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/7990949245
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Photo taken at the Burning Man 2012 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Was walking down below the apartment and saw a lonely picture frame leaning against the wall. If you noticed there are actually some grass poking through the picture frame.
I spent a delightful Saturday with the Famous Flickr Five+ Group in the Yarra Valley, where we visited the picturesque Alowyn Gardens, which I had never heard of before, before having luncheon at the Yarrawood Winery.
The Alowyn Gardens are just outside Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne, in wine making country. The Alowyn Gardens started as weed and blackberry infested paddocks that were formerly part of a horse stud. The land was cleared in 1997 before revitalisation of the soil was conducted. Two years later in 1999 the first tree was planted. Today the Alowyn Gardens are well established, and provide an informative and educational experience for visitors. It has been designed with shade and comfort in mind. Plant names are on view to educate visitors about the gardens. The gardens have one of the largest Japanese Wisteria arbours as their centrepiece. Off it visitors may wander through seven very different styles of gardens, from the formal to the informal, European to Australian. The Native Garden is based on Australian plantings and features a dam and wetland area for animals, including a profusion of frogs and a great deal of birdlife. The Display Garden is a collection of courtyards and small gardens featuring collections of interesting plantings. The idea of the Display garden is to demonstrate what can be achieved in small spaces. The Edible Garden as the name suggests, shows that kitchen gardens can be beautiful as well as functional with rows of fruit trees, vegetable and medicinal gardens and a number of edible flowers that are both tasty and beautiful. The Birch and Casuarina Forest offers a woodland with enchanting hidden dells and contains a historical miner's hut. The Perennial Border contains herbaceous plants which are tough and hardy, survive with minimal work and are able to cope with Australia's hot summers and cold Yarra Valley winters. The Parterre Garden is based on the 15th Century French Renaissance design principles of low formal hedges formed into patterns. The French Provincial Garden is the largest of all the gardens and is surrounded by avenues of Chinese Elm, Crab Apple and Canadian Maple trees. It has large lawns, and a long water feature that runs the width of the garden.
From my photo walk around town last weekend. We spotted this chap enjoying the view over the Trent [reflected in the glass].
I think he was enjoying the heat from the afternoon sun.
Two kayaks on the wharf and ready for action. Blue Rocks, Lunenburg County, Nova Scotia Canada - September 9, 2018.
Camera: Nikon D3300 & Nikkor 35mm 1.8 prime lens
Slightly annoying barrel roll-off on this picture, can't really correct it without part of the photo looking wrong so this is how it stays. Beach on Malmo was strange, not what I was expecting - somewhere between pebbles and sand but at the same time neither, and also both? Told you it was strange! A kind of beige grit! Very very empty too, even tho it was a lovely day.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/7978148482
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
OpalEssence is the Idaho C.O.R.E. Project. It is an egg made of a wooden frame. More info at www.facebook.com/IdahoCORE
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2012 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/7953669254
Share this photo on: facebook • twitter • more...
Boston's CORE project "The Cod Piece".
This is the wooden frame, during the construction.
Photo taken at the Burning Man 2012 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).
If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.
I spent a delightful Saturday with the Famous Flickr Five+ Group in the Yarra Valley, where we visited the picturesque Alowyn Gardens, which I had never heard of before, before having luncheon at the Yarrawood Winery.
The Alowyn Gardens are just outside Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne, in wine making country. The Alowyn Gardens started as weed and blackberry infested paddocks that were formerly part of a horse stud. The land was cleared in 1997 before revitalisation of the soil was conducted. Two years later in 1999 the first tree was planted. Today the Alowyn Gardens are well established, and provide an informative and educational experience for visitors. It has been designed with shade and comfort in mind. Plant names are on view to educate visitors about the gardens. The gardens have one of the largest Japanese Wisteria arbours as their centrepiece. Off it visitors may wander through seven very different styles of gardens, from the formal to the informal, European to Australian. The Native Garden is based on Australian plantings and features a dam and wetland area for animals, including a profusion of frogs and a great deal of birdlife. The Display Garden is a collection of courtyards and small gardens featuring collections of interesting plantings. The idea of the Display garden is to demonstrate what can be achieved in small spaces. The Edible Garden as the name suggests, shows that kitchen gardens can be beautiful as well as functional with rows of fruit trees, vegetable and medicinal gardens and a number of edible flowers that are both tasty and beautiful. The Birch and Casuarina Forest offers a woodland with enchanting hidden dells and contains a historical miner's hut. The Perennial Border contains herbaceous plants which are tough and hardy, survive with minimal work and are able to cope with Australia's hot summers and cold Yarra Valley winters. The Parterre Garden is based on the 15th Century French Renaissance design principles of low formal hedges formed into patterns. The French Provincial Garden is the largest of all the gardens and is surrounded by avenues of Chinese Elm, Crab Apple and Canadian Maple trees. It has large lawns, and a long water feature that runs the width of the garden.
Folding screens with paintings of tattoo designs belonging to an itinerant Coptic tattooist. Inlcude mossques, women, men, birds, a mounted knight in armor, heraldic lions. North Africa and Middle East. 1932 AD. Wood, glass, paint, ink. Special Exhibit: Tattoos: Ritual. Identity. Obsession. Art. From the Musée du quai Branly, Paris, France. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Copyright 2016, James A. Glazier I found the show disappointing, with insufficient coverage of native American tattooing traditions and a lack of thematic and historical scope. Saw a much better exhibit in Mexico in January at UNAM.
I spent a delightful Saturday with the Famous Flickr Five+ Group in the Yarra Valley, where we visited the picturesque Alowyn Gardens, which I had never heard of before, before having luncheon at the Yarrawood Winery.
The Alowyn Gardens are just outside Yarra Glen, east of Melbourne, in wine making country. The Alowyn Gardens started as weed and blackberry infested paddocks that were formerly part of a horse stud. The land was cleared in 1997 before revitalisation of the soil was conducted. Two years later in 1999 the first tree was planted. Today the Alowyn Gardens are well established, and provide an informative and educational experience for visitors. It has been designed with shade and comfort in mind. Plant names are on view to educate visitors about the gardens. The gardens have one of the largest Japanese Wisteria arbours as their centrepiece. Off it visitors may wander through seven very different styles of gardens, from the formal to the informal, European to Australian. The Native Garden is based on Australian plantings and features a dam and wetland area for animals, including a profusion of frogs and a great deal of birdlife. The Display Garden is a collection of courtyards and small gardens featuring collections of interesting plantings. The idea of the Display garden is to demonstrate what can be achieved in small spaces. The Edible Garden as the name suggests, shows that kitchen gardens can be beautiful as well as functional with rows of fruit trees, vegetable and medicinal gardens and a number of edible flowers that are both tasty and beautiful. The Birch and Casuarina Forest offers a woodland with enchanting hidden dells and contains a historical miner's hut. The Perennial Border contains herbaceous plants which are tough and hardy, survive with minimal work and are able to cope with Australia's hot summers and cold Yarra Valley winters. The Parterre Garden is based on the 15th Century French Renaissance design principles of low formal hedges formed into patterns. The French Provincial Garden is the largest of all the gardens and is surrounded by avenues of Chinese Elm, Crab Apple and Canadian Maple trees. It has large lawns, and a long water feature that runs the width of the garden.
mixed media on cardboard kit-box
collage, graphite, dry pastel marker, ink and spraypaint
57cm x 17cm
2012
This "Vintage Bicycle" print is a reproduction from an antique mechanical catalog, circa 1849. I digitally restored it, made some choice enhancements, and voila!
Here is the technical stuff but to me its just my favorite bridge!
Brielle, NJ : Glimmer Glass Drawbridge 108-year old, wooden-framed drawbridge. Only one of its kind in NJ. A bascule bridge- a French design (1890's)-that uses rolling counterweights at one end to cause the other end to pivot.