Posts Tagged ‘images’

postheadericon Cool Eames Coat Rack images

Some cool eames coat rack images:

IMG_20081219_2576
eames coat rack

Image by michellemarie
These things are so great. After Genslers A&D discount, they are dirt cheap and hard to resist. Josh and I each own one now!

poor eames
eames coat rack

Image online tablets cialis by adotmanda
I couldn’t afford the real thing so I opted for a 99¢ coat rack, lacquer, wooden doll heads, and, yes, ping pong balls. online without prescription cheap Camagra buy I CAN afford it now, but buy Ethionamide online this one is special and makes me laugh!

postheadericon Cool Round Wood Table images

Some cool round wood table images:

New Kitchen Table
round wood table

Image by b0jangles

Round buy Erexin-V online online buy cheap without prescription Camagra discount purchase cialis Side table with pictures
round wood table

Image by MASolari
Round table with accessories

postheadericon Cool Wall Mounted Wine Rack images

Some cool wall mounted wine rack images:

Black + Blum Flow Wine Rack
wall mounted wine rack

Image by *NEXT* design for your modern home
Inspired by the flow of liquid, this sculptural wine rack is finished in brushed stainless steel. Flow is wall mounted and will tabs buy Petcam Tablets online online cialis hold up to eight bottles using a minimum of space.
Brushed 2 mm stainless steel Includes wall fixings Packaged in a corrugated box which can be torn in half to make two additional wine racks (for use in your wine cellar)

Soon after moving in – Both During and Pre-”Renovation” – what a mess
wall mounted wine rack

Image by m kasahara

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wall mounted wine rackonline buy cheap Camagra without prescription width=”400″/>

Image by Drew Fansler
Because this is storage for most of my kitchen appliances, I affixed a power strip on the wall behind the shelf and secured it with Scotch foam mounting tape. (you can see it in the upper left-hand corner). As with many of my projects at home and pretty much everything I do at work, I made gratuitous use of the Montera cable management kits.

Yes, that is a Vurm wine rack. The pot the basil is in came from Paxton Gate in San Francisco.

postheadericon Cool Metal Coat Rack images

A few nice metal coat rack images I found:

NYC – West Village: 75½ Bedford Street
metal coat rack

Image by wallyg
At 9½ ft. wide, 75½ Bedford St is the narrowest house in the city. On the inside, it measures 8 ft. 7 in. wide; at its narrowest, it’s 2 ft. wide. From the facade to the rear garden the house is a cozy 30 ft. deep.

This picturesque three-story red-brick structure owns a history a lot wider than its walls, though. It was built in 1873 during buy Zyprexa online a small pox epidemic, for Horatio Homez, trustee of the Hettie Hendricks-Gomez Estate, on what was a former carriage entranceway, online buy cheap without prescription Camagra with stables to the rear, between 75 and 77 Bedford Street. discount purchase cialis However, the assessed value of the plot of land did not change, suggesting that it’s possible the house had built prior to that, but never recorded.

It originally served as a cobbler’s shop, and then a candy factory (and home to candy marker Martha Banta in 1880). Thomas Newett, a shopper, lived here in the 1890’s. By the 1920′s, the neighborhood became largely working class Italian and Victor Ponchoine, an immigrant vineyard cooper, resided here wit his family. In 1923, as the Village was reinvented as an artist enclave, Spalding Hall and fellow artists and actors leased 73-77 Bedford Street, converted them into apartments and established the Cherry Lane Theatre around the corner. Shortly thereafter the openly bisexual poet Edna St. Vincent Millay and her new husband, Eugen Jan Boissevain, a coffee importer, took up residence at 75 1/2 Bedford. They hired Ferdinand Savignano to renovate the house. He put in a skylight and transformed the top floor into a studio, installed casement windows at each level and topped the front with a tiny Dutch stepped gable, most likely to reflect Boissevain’s Dutch heritage. Before that the house had a typical Italianate look common to the 1850s.

According to the plaque on the front of the building, Millay lived there from 1923-1924 and wrote “The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver,” for which she won the Pulitzer Prize. Elizabeth Barnett, literary executor of the Millay Society contests this, saying she wrote the poem while still living in Europe. Writer Ann McGovern (who lived herein the late 1980s) asserted in a newspaper interview that Millay wrote part of “The King’s Henchmen” there.

In the 1930s, the cartoonist William Steig, his wife and her sister, anthropologist Margaret Mead, lived in the house. Actors John Barrymore and Cary Grant also had a brief run in the building. In 1952, the entire corner was slated for redevelopment when Kenneth Carroad, a lawyer and Village resident, purchased the house to preserve it. His family lived here for many years. In 1982, Jeffrey Carroad, a family member, put the house up for sale for 0,000. Cedric Wilson and Christopher Dubs, an architect, purchased it in 1996 for a reported 0,000 and spent another 0,000 on renovations—exposing and oiling the wooden beams on all the ceilings, redoing the floors, staircase, wooden railing, and putting down gray carpeting and air conditioners,

A centrally placed spiral staircase dominates all three floors and bisects the space into two distinct living areas. The narrow steps call for expert sideways navigational skills. Under the stairwell on the first floor is a tiny utility closet, the only closed storage space in the house. All three floors have fireplaces. An overloaded metal coat rack is next to the two-seater sofa in the front parlor. In the rear kitchen, there is a wooden counter with a compact sink, some stools, four mini burners lined up flush against a wall, a refrigerator and cupboards. The kitchen enjoys abundant natural sunlight that radiates through a wall of windows. A Dutch door gives access to a leafy garden. To the right is an arched black iron gate, which exits onto Commerce St.

Both the second- and third-floor rear rooms (office and bedroom, respectively) feature glass and wooden doors that open wide onto a sturdy U-shaped iron balcony that overlooks the garden. The third-floor front constitutes the storage area: one wall of shelves and a hanging bar along another wall. In the kitchen a heavy trapdoor is propped open to reveal a steep staircase that leads down to the basement boiler/laundry room at the back and a recording studio and a small bed at the front. A dollhouse-sized kitchenette and a bathroom are nestled between the two mini spaces.

The Blue Shutter
metal coat rack

Image by Svadilfari
A hand colored photo of an old lady hangs on a blue shutter along with a metal coat rack and a red, white, andblue baton

P1000202
metal coat rack

Image by SystemF92
some hangers at a conference room

postheadericon Cool Acacia Wood Furniture images

A few nice acacia wood furniture images I found:

fever buy Plavix online tree
acacia wood furniture

Image by Kalense Kid
When the Europeans began to explore Africa they often got sick; a lot of biodiversity gives people nasty fevers – in particular, malaria. If you camped near one of these striking trees, you seemed to be particularly likely to get sick. So it got its name, the Fever Tree.

Acacia xanthophloea likes damp ground and the edges of lakes. So do the mosquitoes that carry malaria. Elementary, my dear Watson.

Acacia meant thorn in ancient Greek, xanthos meant yellow and phloios meant bark.

The wood is hard and heavy and makes attractive furniture.

11 – New bedroom suite
acacia wood furniture

Image by tourist_on_earth
Today my wife decided we needed a new bedroom suite (we didn’t) but now we have one. Its a hard wood bed (acacia) with side tables and a low boy (well its like a tall boy but its low and wide)…its not bad and we really should spend our online buy cheap without prescription Camagra money…which money I hear people from other countries ask…well the genius economic minds within our government recently decided that the best way to support the Australian economy in the difficult credit crisis time was to give everyone a cool 00 (OK not everyone but its was a healthy number of us, about a million familes) anyhow…Ive done my part. discount purchase cialis Happy credit crisis all of us.