12 X 12 CANOPY https://blog.dnevnik.hr/12-x-12-canopy

petak, 21.10.2011.

DOOR SIDELIGHT BLINDS - SIDELIGHT BLINDS


Door Sidelight Blinds - Indoor Shutters For Windows - Arched Drapery Rod.



Door Sidelight Blinds





door sidelight blinds






    sidelight
  • A light placed at the side of something

  • A sidelight is a window, usually with a vertical emphasis, that flanks a door. Sidelights are narrow, usually stationary and found immediately adjacent doorways.Barr, Peter. "", 19th Century Adrian Architecture, accessed June 17, 2009."", Community Partnership Center, accessed June 17, 2009.

  • A piece of incidental information that helps to clarify or enliven a subject

  • A light found at the side of something; especially of a vehicle; A window found at one or both sides of a door

  • A ship's port (red) and starboard (green) navigation lights

  • light carried by a boat that indicates the boat's direction; vessels at night carry a red light on the port bow and a green light on the starboard bow





    blinds
  • The blinds are forced bets posted by players to the left of the dealer button in flop-style poker games. The number of blinds is usually two, but can be one or three.

  • A window blind is a type of window covering which is made with slats of fabric, wood, plastic or metal that adjust by rotating from an open position to a closed position by allowing slats to overlap. A roller blind does not have slats but comprises a single piece of material.

  • Cause (someone) to be unable to see, permanently or temporarily

  • window coverings, especially vertical blinds, wood blinds, roller blinds, pleated blinds

  • Deprive (someone) of understanding, judgment, or perception

  • Confuse or overawe someone with something difficult to understand





    door
  • A doorway

  • Used to refer to the distance from one building in a row to another

  • anything providing a means of access (or escape); "we closed the door to Haitian immigrants"; "education is the door to success"

  • A hinged, sliding, or revolving barrier at the entrance to a building, room, or vehicle, or in the framework of a cupboard

  • a swinging or sliding barrier that will close the entrance to a room or building or vehicle; "he knocked on the door"; "he slammed the door as he left"

  • doorway: the entrance (the space in a wall) through which you enter or leave a room or building; the space that a door can close; "he stuck his head in the doorway"











"Wardlow", Parkville, Victoria Australia










Wardlow was built by CC Fewster in 1888 for John Boyes, owner of the Brunswick Iron Foundry. The architect is not known, but was possibly by the partnership of Twentyman & Askew, who three years later designed a warehouse for Boyes in Russell Street, contracting to the same builder, Fewster.

Wardlow was the substantial element of a larger development that began with 110 and 112 Park Drive and later included the adjoining houses at 33, 35, and 37 Degraves Street, finished in 1889. All the houses had cast iron decoration from Boyes' Brunswick Foundry, and also share other details including tessellated pavements and decorative patterns etched into the exterior render.

Wardlow is in an excellent state of preservation because of successive ownership and occupation by several generations of the Boyes family until 1975. The exterior of the house and layout of the garden are virtually as they were in 1888. The side and rear courtyards were created in the 1990s.

The interior decorative scheme retains many elements. The drawing room and dining room retain their respective characteristic masculine and feminine schemes. The entrance hall, drawing room, dining room and parlour retain decorative wallpapers; gilded pelmets survive in the dining room and study; joinery and doors are wood grained in imitation of walnut, with gold stencilling. Original leadlight and coloured glass sidelights to the front door light the entrance hallway. The name Wardlow is etched in the ruby glass in the transom light over the front door. In the hallway the floor is partly laid with encaustic tessellated tiles, and original wall and ceiling paper and cornices enriched with plaster mouldings also survive. The drawing room has original silk and velvet curtains and an overmantel.

The service areas have been substantially modernised although a panel of seven servant bells, with associated cranks and wires, survive in the kitchen vestibule.

The first floor rooms were redecorated in the 1920s and 1930s, but retain some of their Venetian blinds. Original wallpapers identical to those in the main hallway survive in the first floor passageway. A new bathroom was installed in an upstairs bedroom in the 1990s.
(Source: Heritage Victoria)

"On a day focused upon world poverty, the cycles of disadvantage and wealth turned full circle at Melbourne's biggest property auction yesterday.

About 400 inner-suburban property watchers turned out to see Wardlow, the Italianate Parkville mansion formerly occupied by the financially troubled couple Andrew Landeryou and Kimberley Kitching, sell at auction for $1.84 million.

The seller was Melbourne businessman Solomon Lew's company Jordanlane. Mr Lew claims he is owed $3 million by the now-separated couple as a result of a failed joint business venture."

(Source: "The Age" July 3 2005)











Woody was here




Woody was here





Sally woke me at the crack of dawn on Sunday morning out of a sound sleep, calling for me to hurry and bring my camera. As I showed up at the front door, I saw through the sidelight a beautiful 15 inch Pilated Woodpecker on a tree 10 feet from the house. Wrong lens... I ran and grabbed my 300 mm, slapped it on my Canon, and ran back. Slowly opening a window blind, I was in full view of that magnificent bird. I fired off 16 shots, as he was really going at that tree, his head bobbing back and forth. He had a beautiful red crown and huge tail.

I then ran upstairs to download my shots, and started crying... When I fumbled the long lens on, I must have moved the control knob one klick to Manual mode. I shot all shots at 1/320 and f/11. Sixteen black, grainy images that could not be rescued with Photoshop.

That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it!









door sidelight blinds







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21.10.2011. u 02:48 • 0 KomentaraPrint#^

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