Leaderboard
728x15
Showing posts with label Shack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shack. Show all posts

Nice Image Shack photos

A few nice image shack images I found:


Black woman and child standing on the porch of a wooden shack
image shack
Image by Kheel Center, Cornell University
Title: Black woman and child standing on the porch of a wooden shack

Date: 1937

Photographer: Louise Boyle

Photo ID: 5859pb2f28ccc800g

Collection: Louise Boyle. Southern Tenant Farmers Union Photographs, 1937 and 1982

Repository: The Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in the ILR School at Cornell University is the Catherwood Library unit that collects, preserves, and makes accessible special collections documenting the history of the workplace and labor relations. www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel

Notes:

Copyright: The copyright status of this image is unknown. It may also be subject to third party rights of privacy or publicity. Images are being made available for purposes of private study, scholarship, and research. The Kheel Center would like to learn more about this image and hear from any copyright owners who are not properly identified so that we may make the necessary corrections.

Tags: Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives,Cornell University Library,African Americans, Housing, Living Conditions, Farm Workers,


next but one to the blue shack
image shack
Image by grepnold
The building but one from the still-unguessed blue shack and phone box I posted to the GWL pool a few images back.

What's in the middle between them?


Qerna by Night
image shack
Image by anataman
Black and white image of shack and post, single light.

Cool Image Shack images

A few nice image shack images I found:


Small town dreams
image shack
Image by amber10_79
Thou shalt sleep in thy clouds, careless of the voice of the morning


Chasing clouds
image shack
Image by amber10_79
I know that I shall meet my fate somewhere among the clouds above; those that I fight I do not hate, those that I guard I do not love. -William Butler Yeats


There Was A Hidden Place
image shack
Image by and one half images
When you drive along the parallel roads from highway 101 in Sonoma County you can find some fascinating scenery. Most of the land is farm fro grazing or, you guessed it, vineyards, and most of it looks like it's been there forever. This is tucked away on a beautiful little stretch between Windsor and Guernville, CA.

www.andonehalfimages.com

Nice Image Shack photos

Check out these image shack images:



The Red Shack
image shack
Image by jasonmp85
This waterfront property was a strinkingly different color than the rest of the units. (Note: Desaturation has been performed on most of the colors on this image, it of course wasn't nearly that striking)


Tower
image shack
Image by DieselDemon
Went light painting at the beach. Don't know why I never noticed this life guard shack before. Now I need to go back and play with it more; just took this shot as I was leaving.

No Photoshop to image, only re sized for web.

Cool Image Shack images

Some cool image shack images:


iChat with Phil Sherry in sweden
image shack
Image by luxuryluke
? Adium gives up to iChat with foul results.
turns out he was on adium all along. oh well!!!

See, what we did is (ATGS [A-Team-Gesture-Style]!) we had phil hookup his RTSC Transmogrifier (seen here) to auto mips11 the chat signal with his Ham Radio (seen here.) from english into swedish. then, midway across the atlantic, we employed Adium's proprietary language translater on my enigma machine (seen here) which would then reconvert it to english and decode the ?OTR slipcryp code (using this) back into chat-type speak.

Quite simple, really.
Obviously it went wrong somewhere, though.


Karl Fortess: Island Dock Yard, 1934
image shack
Image by americanartmuseum
Island Dock Yard, 1934
Karl Fortess, Born: Antwerp, Belgium 1907 Died: Woodstock, New York 1993
oil on canvas 32 1/4 x 48 1/8 in. (81.8 x 122.2 cm.)
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Transfer from the U.S. Department of Labor 1964.1.94

Trains, trucks, and industrial buildings were what Karl Fortess envisioned when the Public Works of Art Project suggested that he depict “the American Scene.” The artist left his home in the picturesque artists’ colony of Woodstock, New York, and traveled ten miles to Kingston to make this painting. Kingston had long been a thriving Hudson River port town that supplied Pennsylvania coal and local brick, stone, and cement to New York City. The Depression slowed shipping, but a newly invented concrete mixture stimulated the local cement business. Fortess’s pictorial research at Kingston was demanding, as he noted, “Inclement weather and bad roads have made it impossible to go into Kingston as often as necessary.”

Fortess described his painting as “a view of the Kingston Point railway yard, showing track intersections, [a] station, freight trains, . . . shacks, and [a] background of buildings with a suggestion of a plain and barren winter trees [on] a grey day.” The artist emphasized the angular geometry of the structures. He played the predominant shadowy gray colors against spots of intense red, yellow, and blue. Trucks and trains hurry to and fro, but the action proceeds without the presence of a single visible human figure.

Personal, educational and non-commercial use of digital images from the American Art Museum's collection is permitted, with attribution to the Smithsonian American Art Museum, for all images unless otherwise noted. http://americanart.si.edu/collections/rights/


Scrap House New Orleans
image shack
Image by Daniel Horande Photography
Artist Sally Heller designed this sculpture, built entirely out of found and recycled material, and dedicated it to the victims of Hurricane Katrina. A ruined shack that resembles Dorothy’s house blown off-track sits in a tree constructed from pieces of oil drums. Inside, a light shines for those seeking to return home. It’s a powerful piece of work that sits in an appropriate setting – across from the Convention Center, where so many refugees were displaced in the aftermath of the Storm.

Source: www.lonelyplanet.com/usa/new-orleans/sights/monument/scra...

Image made of 7 Exposures.

Cool Image Shack images

Some cool image shack images:


The Bull at Pinehurst Farms, Sheboygan Falls, Wisconsin
image shack
Image by danperry.com
Read The Bull at Pinehurst Farms Review on my blog.

Starters Shack


little house of horrors
image shack
Image by Kim Denise
Okay, it's not really a house...more of a cottage. A small one. But home!

Update, April 2007: that cute cottage turned out to be filled with mold. It made us both ill. We moved out in February, and I still can't look at the place without shuddering. Therefore, I've decided to submit it to the Photoshop Contest group as the Week 102 raw image. I hope to see some truly ghoulish transformations!

Nice Image Shack photos

A few nice image shack images I found:


Dungeness 21-04-2012
image shack
Image by Karen Roe
Dungeness is a headland on the coast of Kent, England, formed largely of a shingle beach in the form of a cuspate foreland. It shelters a large area of low-lying land, Romney Marsh. Dungeness is also the name given to a “village” situated along the beach, and to an important ecological site on the same location. It is one of the largest expanses of shingle in the world. It is of international conservation importance for its geomorphology, plant and invertebrate communities and birdlife.

Dungeness is not truly a village, more a scattered collection of dwellings. Some of the homes, small wooden houses in the main, many built around old railway coaches, are owned and lived in by fishermen, whose boats lie on the beach; some are occupied by people trying to escape the pressured outside world. The shack-like properties have a high value on the property market.

Perhaps the most famous house is Prospect Cottage, formerly owned by the late artist and film director Derek Jarman. The cottage itself is painted black, with a poem, part of John Donne's “The Sunne Rising”, written on one side in black lettering. The garden however is the main attraction. Reflecting the bleak, windswept landscape of the peninsula, Derek Jarman's garden is made of pebbles, driftwood, scrap metal and a few hardy plants.

There is a remarkable and unique variety of wildlife living at Dungeness, with over 600 different types of plant (a third of all those found in Britain). It is one of the best places in Britain to find insects such as moths, bees and beetles, and spiders; many of these are very rare, some found nowhere else in Britain. The short-haired bumblebee, declared extinct in the UK nearly a decade ago, but which has survived in New Zealand after being shipped there more than 100 years ago, is to be reintroduced at Dungeness in the spring of 2010.


Dungeness 21-04-2012
image shack
Image by Karen Roe
Dungeness is a headland on the coast of Kent, England, formed largely of a shingle beach in the form of a cuspate foreland. It shelters a large area of low-lying land, Romney Marsh. Dungeness is also the name given to a “village” situated along the beach, and to an important ecological site on the same location. It is one of the largest expanses of shingle in the world. It is of international conservation importance for its geomorphology, plant and invertebrate communities and birdlife.

Dungeness is not truly a village, more a scattered collection of dwellings. Some of the homes, small wooden houses in the main, many built around old railway coaches, are owned and lived in by fishermen, whose boats lie on the beach; some are occupied by people trying to escape the pressured outside world. The shack-like properties have a high value on the property market.

Perhaps the most famous house is Prospect Cottage, formerly owned by the late artist and film director Derek Jarman. The cottage itself is painted black, with a poem, part of John Donne's “The Sunne Rising”, written on one side in black lettering. The garden however is the main attraction. Reflecting the bleak, windswept landscape of the peninsula, Derek Jarman's garden is made of pebbles, driftwood, scrap metal and a few hardy plants.

There is a remarkable and unique variety of wildlife living at Dungeness, with over 600 different types of plant (a third of all those found in Britain). It is one of the best places in Britain to find insects such as moths, bees and beetles, and spiders; many of these are very rare, some found nowhere else in Britain. The short-haired bumblebee, declared extinct in the UK nearly a decade ago, but which has survived in New Zealand after being shipped there more than 100 years ago, is to be reintroduced at Dungeness in the spring of 2010.

Nice Image Shack photos

Some cool image shack images:


Dungeness 21-04-2012
image shack
Image by Karen Roe
Dungeness is a headland on the coast of Kent, England, formed largely of a shingle beach in the form of a cuspate foreland. It shelters a large area of low-lying land, Romney Marsh. Dungeness is also the name given to a “village” situated along the beach, and to an important ecological site on the same location. It is one of the largest expanses of shingle in the world. It is of international conservation importance for its geomorphology, plant and invertebrate communities and birdlife.

Dungeness is not truly a village, more a scattered collection of dwellings. Some of the homes, small wooden houses in the main, many built around old railway coaches, are owned and lived in by fishermen, whose boats lie on the beach; some are occupied by people trying to escape the pressured outside world. The shack-like properties have a high value on the property market.

Perhaps the most famous house is Prospect Cottage, formerly owned by the late artist and film director Derek Jarman. The cottage itself is painted black, with a poem, part of John Donne's “The Sunne Rising”, written on one side in black lettering. The garden however is the main attraction. Reflecting the bleak, windswept landscape of the peninsula, Derek Jarman's garden is made of pebbles, driftwood, scrap metal and a few hardy plants.

There is a remarkable and unique variety of wildlife living at Dungeness, with over 600 different types of plant (a third of all those found in Britain). It is one of the best places in Britain to find insects such as moths, bees and beetles, and spiders; many of these are very rare, some found nowhere else in Britain. The short-haired bumblebee, declared extinct in the UK nearly a decade ago, but which has survived in New Zealand after being shipped there more than 100 years ago, is to be reintroduced at Dungeness in the spring of 2010.


Dungeness 21-04-2012
image shack
Image by Karen Roe
Dungeness is a headland on the coast of Kent, England, formed largely of a shingle beach in the form of a cuspate foreland. It shelters a large area of low-lying land, Romney Marsh. Dungeness is also the name given to a “village” situated along the beach, and to an important ecological site on the same location. It is one of the largest expanses of shingle in the world. It is of international conservation importance for its geomorphology, plant and invertebrate communities and birdlife.

Dungeness is not truly a village, more a scattered collection of dwellings. Some of the homes, small wooden houses in the main, many built around old railway coaches, are owned and lived in by fishermen, whose boats lie on the beach; some are occupied by people trying to escape the pressured outside world. The shack-like properties have a high value on the property market.

Perhaps the most famous house is Prospect Cottage, formerly owned by the late artist and film director Derek Jarman. The cottage itself is painted black, with a poem, part of John Donne's “The Sunne Rising”, written on one side in black lettering. The garden however is the main attraction. Reflecting the bleak, windswept landscape of the peninsula, Derek Jarman's garden is made of pebbles, driftwood, scrap metal and a few hardy plants.

There is a remarkable and unique variety of wildlife living at Dungeness, with over 600 different types of plant (a third of all those found in Britain). It is one of the best places in Britain to find insects such as moths, bees and beetles, and spiders; many of these are very rare, some found nowhere else in Britain. The short-haired bumblebee, declared extinct in the UK nearly a decade ago, but which has survived in New Zealand after being shipped there more than 100 years ago, is to be reintroduced at Dungeness in the spring of 2010.

Nice Image Shack photos

Some cool image shack images:


Rockport harbour
image shack
Image by RiffRaff
We didn't take a single picture of that famous shack.


Curious kitten
image shack
Image by oalfonso
Sorry, the image is blurred. My hands were shacking.

Isn't he lovely?


Beautiful winter light at Ullswater from the verandah of the Sharrow Bay Hotel
image shack
Image by Fiona in Eden
A very rare gorgeous weather February day, high pressure and an inversion over the lake. The views took our breath away. The light was stunning that afternoon and the air crystal clear and completely still. The lake was silent and still.

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Leaderboard