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Just from a series of studio shots taken with the self timer - I'm determined to have more "action" shots of the studio on my website and stuff.
It's blurry but I rather liked the blurry me with the worktable all in focus!
My soldering station is seperate from my bench. I carved out a corner of my big art worktable for it.
2016-OCT-15; Mark Bauer built a worktable to cover his Shopsmith and adding a work surface to his shop.
Origin: Great Britain. Circa: 1820. Period: 19th Century. A fine English Regency work or side table on trestle base with drop leaves in beautiful plum mahogany, with brass banding on edge of table and ebonized banding around drawers and block feet. Back and front of table are identical, with front offering two working drawers and back, two faux drawers, England, circa 1820. Shop@HighBoy
I'm growing taller. Yah right! My drawer space is growing upwards. Can't help it. Even the space under my worktable is filling up and I think the family will be making arrangements for me to move into a warehouse if I don't get my act in order. I'm trying, really trying but there is nothing that will make me STOP bead shopping!
Built from reclaimed marble, recovered by reuse action (reuseaction.com) from a lavatory renovation in one of the Buffalo Public Schools. It was a stall partition, so a close inspection shows who loved who, and all sorts of school age nonsense scratched into the marble. We cut it down to size for the customer and left the markings in the marble as part of its charm. The legs, undercarriage and mounting brackets are all made of reclaimed house trim. The marble installed originally in the 1920s, most likely by Italian immigrant craftsmen. In this city the old wood work was done by Poles and Germans, while the stone work was done by the Italians. crafts they brought from their home countries. Without rescuing this material it (and its heritage) would be in the landfill.
Each piece we build is unique and imbued with history...and keeping materials out of landfills.
My very clever mates at work put this red chair by my worktable and when I pushed the chair against the yellow wall I thought it made a nice motive. It doesn't have to be a big idea to be a good idea.
2016-OCT-15; Mark Bauer built a worktable to cover his Shopsmith and adding a work surface to his shop.
2016-OCT-15; Mark Bauer built a worktable to cover his Shopsmith and adding a work surface to his shop.
A 'remade' object from Worktable by Kate McIntosh
Photo by Katherine Leedale www.katherineleedale.com
2016-OCT-15; Mark Bauer built a worktable to cover his Shopsmith and adding a work surface to his shop.
This is a new woodworking bench that is constructed from reclaimed wood and wood from a previous worktable
This picture was taken when they were incorporating different ingredients into the mixing bowl. They were also looking at the weighing scale as they were adding the ingredients in.
I wanted to create a different perspective, to break away from the normality of taking "on the ground" shots. Also, their bodies are used as a symmetry and balance with both of them facing at a particular angle, across one another.
The symmetry also enables the imaginary line between Zahirah and her student, to allow viewers to visualize the contrast of the amount of ingredients on the silver worktable.
I made edits to the photo by increasing the exposure and contrast as the photo was dimmer despite slowing down the shutter speed to 1/10.
A 'remade' object from Worktable by Kate McIntosh
Photo by Katherine Leedale www.katherineleedale.com