Dead Hollow Tree Trunk. Pentax ME SMC Pentax-M 50mm F1.7 Fujifilm 200
Update: It is January third. 3 days since I vowed to love this state. I vowed to treat it like my home and my favorite place to be for the next year. Update: This is very hard when it is below freezing for a week straight. Just sayin. It will be easier to love Utah […]
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the beauty that comes from years of cold, wind and harsh living
Moss growing in your lawn or garden can be frustrating if you do not want it there. Ridding lawn of moss takes a little work, but it can be done. Take a look at how to kill moss in this article.
On Thursday, I came upon a twisted tree. Took one picture from the car with the window rolled down. I was at a stop sign and had to stop anyways, and there were no cars around, so, I did it. Then I though, this tree is amazing, I need to check this tree out a little closer. I parked, got up close and took a few more pictures. How does this happen? It's like a giant has tried to pull this tree out like a weed, twisting it. I have no idea what kind of tree it is. Is there a kind of tree that grows like this? Funny thing is, while I was taking the picture, the thought of tilting my head back to look at the leaves did not even enter my mind. Here is some more twisted stuff: For 25 Seriously twisted trees, from Web Urbanist, click here. For twisted tree images, click here. For twisted bacon from The Wicked Noodle, click here. For beautiful photography by Twisted Tree Photo, click here.
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Vines hug tightly, attached for life giving this tree trunk a depth and texture worth capturing. The relationship between vine and tree create space for moss to grow and critters to roam. How wonderful it must be to hug a tree!
Moss glowing under overcast skies on the bark of a large tree in the Washington Park Arboretum, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA, February, Seattle_Arboretum-6302
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I've been thinking about circles a lot lately...they seem to be everywhere. I guess it just depends what you focus on, and once you start looking for something it's all you see. Circles evoke both mysterious, eternal ideas... the universe, motion, cycles without beginning or end, the sun and the moon, as well as silly and joyful things like polka dots, bubbles, and juggling balls. It's the shape of the ball of earth we live on. The perfect symmetry of the shape is subliminally satisfying. Above: Photo of Winter Horsetail stem enlarged 30 times, by Karl Blossfeldt published 1928 Above: Bridge made of concrete tubes Vanessa Bell's fabric (this is a piece re-issued by Laura Ashley a number of years ago) with a ball motif she used often in her designs, inspired circles I'm painting on the walls in a room I'm designing at the Good Shepherd Center for Homeless Women and Children. Above: A cupboard Vanessa Bell painted in her bedroom at Charleston, 1917 Above: Book cover designed by Vanessa Bell for her sister, Virginia Woolf. Above: Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant designed this table and chairs for Virginia Woolf. Above: Sri Yantra Painting, Rajasthan, late 18th century. From "Tantra Art" by Ajit Mookerjee Above: Judy Ledgerwood, Detail of Tyrian Rose, 2008 Above: Judy Ledgerwood "Rainwashed" 2008 Above: John Baldessari "Two Opponents (Blue and Yellow)" 2004 Above: John Baldessari "Studio" 1988 Above: John Baldessari poster for the band New Order Above: Photo by Eddie Hausner, "Hula Hoop Craze" Above: When I was growing up some of my dad's students at Boston University started a commune called "Total Loss Farm". We used to visit sometimes...this book has pictures taken there. Above: Marcel Duchamp with his piece "Bicycle Wheel", the first of his "ready-made" pieces, from 1913. He said about this piece "To see that wheel turning was very soothing, very comforting, a sort of opening of the avenues onto other things than the material life of every day. I liked the idea of having a bicycle wheel in my studio. I enjoyed looking at it just as I enjoy looking at the flames dancing in a fireplace." When I mentioned working on a circle post, a friend pointed out that without circles there would be no leisure. The extra time created by wheels on carts, becoming tires, becoming wheels on planes allowed us to have time to relax. Above: In Todos Santos old tires made into colorful playground equipment. Above: White wall tires Above: Bathing attire designed by Sonia Delauney. This photo is on view in her show at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum in NY till June 19th Above: Marimekko "Klaava" nightgown, 1975, designed by Annika Rimala Above:Patti Boyd and Celia Hammond wearing Capsule Line felt helmets designed by Edward Mann, 1965. Photo by John French. Above: Sketch by Bonnard in his notebook Above: Photo by Tim Walker for Vogue Italia Above: Chris Ofili, "Afro Margin Eight", 2007, from his show at David Zwirner Gallery fall 2009 Above: Judy Ledgerwood, Detail from "Black Tears" 2001 Above: Mathieu Mategot Panama Chair, 1953, perforated metal Above: Mathieu Mategot Santiago Collection magazine holder. The Santiago Collection, designed in 1954, used metal slats perforated like the edge of film. Above: Mathieu Mategot designed this fixture, the Rigiband Ceiling Light in 1954. It was a precurser to the Santiago Collection. It makes a wonderful pattern on the wall and ceiling. Above: Little Dot had a similar idea about creating patterns on the wall. She painted polka dots on a light bulb to great effect! Above: Artist Nick Cave's "Sound Suit" Above: Polka dot tree in La Paz, Baja California...the happy girl is my daughter, quite a few years ago. Above: Installations by Yayoi Kusama Above and below: Marimekko "Kivet" pattern, 1956, designed by Maija Isola Above: Knoll Ad for Saarinen Chair Above: Alexander Calder "Hanging Apricot" Mobile Above: This fantastic place is Barton's Bobonniere designed by Alvin Lustig (famous for his book designs) and Victor Gruen, who is known for having invented the modern mall. Above: Light fixture detail from Barton's Above: Vasily Kandinsky, Several Circles, 1926, collection Guggenheim Museum. Kandinsky is quoted saying that “ the circle is the synthesis of the greatest oppositions. It combines the concentric and the eccentric in a single form and in equilibrium. Of the three primary forms, it points most clearly to the fourth dimension.” Above: Poster for a Sonia Delaunay exhibit Above: Sonia Delaunay "Rhythme Colore", 1946. This is on view at the Cooper Hewitt in the show "Color Moves: Art and Fashion by Sonia Delaunay" till June 19th 2011. Above: Drawings by Sonia Delaunay for bathing suit designs Above: Marbles, beads, and buttons I've collected Above: Stereo band graphic Above: Japanese caligraphy which includes colored circles. Above: Painting by Beatriz Milhazes Above: Window installation by Beatriz Milhazes, as part of her survey exhibition at the Estacao Pinacoteca, Sao Paolo, Brazil, in 2008. Above: photo by Mike Slack Above: Photo by Uta Barth Above: Donald Sultan "Smoke Rings February 14th 2001" Above: Adam Fuss "Ark" 2005 silver gelatin print photogram. Fuss makes his photograms by using only light sensitive paper and a light source casting shadows or reflections on the support surface. This can be done in sunlight, or with artificial light. In this photogram the paper is submersed in water and picks up ripples in the water directly, not through a negative. Above: Ring around the moon Above: Ruth Asawa in front of her work, 1954 Above: Things we found on the beach...marbles, balls, and round rubber pieces. Above: Joseph Cornell, "Sun Box", 1956 Above: Jean Tinguely and Yves Klein Above: By Jean Tinguely, 1954 Above: By Jean Tinguely, this machine draws. Above: By Jean Tinguely, this machine, "Homage to New York", 1960, was designed to self destruct. Above: Spinning wheels turned wool into yarn, and round bobbins and spools hold thread for sewing machines. These vintage bobbins are from the blog "A Collection a Day"...this is day 24. Above: Vintage buttons Above: Julia Child's famous peg board where she hung her pots and pans. Their places are all marked. Above: Maira Kalman included her late husband Tibor's collection of onion rings in her retrospective. Above: Gordon Matta-Clark, from his Whitney retrospective "You Are The Measure", 2007. Above: Two passengers on the German ocean liner MS St. Louis. "The Voyage of the Damned" was based on their terribly sad true story... a ship full of German Jewish refugees trying to find a country that would accept them in 1939. Above: A round opening at Arcosanti, the utopian town in Arizona designed by Italian architect Paolo Soleri. I spent a summer there working on the project. Soleri believed in creating mixed use multi story structures to live and work in, leaving lots of open land all around, instead of single family houses taking a much greater amount of acreage per person. Above: The area at Arcosanti where the Soleri bells are made. Above: The opening at the top of the Pantheon Above: Japanese Roof tiles Above: The Maritime Hotel, NY, which was originally designed for the Maritime Union in the late 1960s with a porthole window theme. Above: A room at the Maritime Hotel. Above: Strange effect... I think this is a mirror hung on a cement wall. Above: Jean Prouve in front of steel doors with porthole type windows. He used these doors n his own house, as well as in the Maison Tropicales shown below. Above: Detail of Prouve's home Above: One of three prefab homes Jean Prouve designed for use in Niger. The design was called "Maison Tropicale", and it was meant to withstand scorching heat, tropical rain, tornadoes and even gunfire, but when the prefabricated homes were offered to the French bureaucrats living in the West African colony of Niger in the late 1940s only three were purchased. The idea of living under a metal roof in extreme heat may not have seemed desirable, and they were expensive to build, but they are beautiful. In 2007 Christie's auctioned one of the three, and it was purchased for about five million dollars in 2007. Above: Here it is on view in NY, in Long Island City, next to the Queensboro Bridge. Above: A view of the interior of the "Maison Tropicale" Above: The walkway around the house Above: There is something so appealing about the pattern of circles created by the dryer fronts in laundromats, not to mention the memory of warmth and comforting clean smells. Photo by Amber Miller Above: Round Streamline Moderne diner Above: Kenneth Noland, Circle, 1998 Above: Damien Hirst, "Valium" 2000 Above: Robert Irwin untitled disc painting, 1968, collection MOMA. There are four lights shining on the disc creating the shadows around it. Above: Kenneth Noland "Brass Sound" 1962 Above: A promotional sticker for my brother, Josh Clayton-Felt's album, "Inarticulate Nature Boy" on A&M. It was designed by Laramie Garcia. Above: The round opening in my brother's guitar Above: This is where the name of this blog came from...a favorite record by the Incredible String Band...see track 3. From cylinders to albums to CDs all music seems to be recorded on circles. Even tapes wind around on circular spindles. Above: "Jyoti", or "Light" Tempera painting in gold. Deccani school, 18th century. From Tantra Art, by Ajit Mookerjee Above: Michiel Jansz van Miereveldt, "Portrait of a Woman"(1628) wearing a ruff. Above: Sol LeWitt "Wall Drawing 462" at Mass MoCA. this exhibit will be up for 25 years. "Wall Drawing Retrospective" includes 105 of LeWitt's large scale wall drawings from 1969-2007. Mass MoCA is housed in a set of old factory buildings, and seeing this span of work all together, in this space, is really worth a visit. Above: Redwood tree rings Above: Stacked wood bowls Above: Artwork at Kettles Yard, Cambridge, England. I think the artist is Ben Nicholson. Above Martin Puryear, untitled, 1981-2, painted Poderosa Pine, 58" diameter Above: Painting detail by Pieter Bruegel the elder, 1560 Above: Boys rolling bicycle rim hoops in Toronto, 1922 Above: Neon by The Cyrcle, known for the songs "Turn Down Day" and "Red Rubber Ball". Above: Sandro Botticelli, Tondo of Madonna and Child 1481-1483 Above: Ulrich Ruckriem marking circles Above: Richard Long, "Nomad Circle", Mongolia 1996 Above: Richard Long, "Touareg Circle", The Sahara, 1988 Above: Richard Long, "Norfolk Flint Circle" Above: Seahenge, a prehistoric monument discovered in 1998, is probably 4,000 years old. It was excavated, and moved to an environment where it could be protected, to the dismay of many. In the center is a large inverted oak stump, surrounded by 55 split oak trunks with the bark facing out. Above: Stonehenge
In recent years, there has been a growing trend towards incorporating natural elements into home design. From using reclaimed wood for furniture to adding
This Hollow Tree trunk at Hurstmonceux is about six or seven feet diameter.
Today, furniture makers have already thought so much that when choosing for consumers decide and make luxurious, original, fabulous furniture to impress them, not unfairly. But there are those who love something simpler, closer to nature, more natural.
In recent years, there has been a growing trend towards incorporating natural elements into home design. From using reclaimed wood for furniture to adding
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A collection of images I love. A reflection of my mind.
a giant ash tree trunk has been fastidiously hand carved and carefully chiseled down by maskull lasserre to reveal the form of a precariously frayed rope.
Cracked tree trunk
Cutting down the trunk doesn’t mean your troubles are over. These two methods for how to kill tree roots will help you regain your yard.
See how eight carvers from around the world are transforming damaged trees into works of art!
How to remove a tree stump with Epsom salt.
talking to trees
Today, furniture makers have already thought so much that when choosing for consumers decide and make luxurious, original, fabulous furniture to impress them, not unfairly. But there are those who love something simpler, closer to nature, more natural.