BAMBOO SHADES

26.01.2012., četvrtak

LONG DRAPERY ROD : DRAPERY ROD


Long drapery rod : Solar shade fabric : Raleigh nc plantation shutters.



Long Drapery Rod





long drapery rod






    drapery
  • Drapery is a general word referring to cloths or textiles (Old French drap, from Late Latin drappus). It may refer to cloth used for decorative purposes - such as around windows - or to the trade of retailing cloth, originally mostly for clothing, formerly conducted by drapers.

  • curtain: hanging cloth used as a blind (especially for a window)

  • cloth gracefully draped and arranged in loose folds

  • Long curtains of heavy fabric

  • Cloth coverings hanging in loose folds

  • The artistic arrangement of clothing in sculpture or painting





    long
  • primarily temporal sense; being or indicating a relatively great or greater than average duration or passage of time or a duration as specified; "a long life"; "a long boring speech"; "a long time"; "a long friendship"; "a long game"; "long ago"; "an hour long"

  • for an extended time or at a distant time; "a promotion long overdue"; "something long hoped for"; "his name has long been forgotten"; "talked all night long"; "how long will you be gone?"; "arrived long before he was expected"; "it is long after your bedtime"

  • (after a measurement and in questions) Measuring a specified distance from end to end

  • (of a journey) Covering a great distance

  • Measuring a great distance from end to end

  • hanker: desire strongly or persistently





    rod
  • a long thin implement made of metal or wood

  • A thin straight bar, esp. of wood or metal

  • perch: a linear measure of 16.5 feet

  • any rod-shaped bacterium

  • A wand or staff as a symbol of office, authority, or power

  • A slender straight stick or shoot growing on or cut from a tree or bush











Bartholdi Fountain




Bartholdi Fountain





Bartholdi Fountain. Bartholdi is the man who designed the Statue of Liberty in NY harbor.

The Bartholdi Fountain

The Bartholdi Fountain, designed by the sculptor of the Statue of Liberty, graces the flower-filled Bartholdi Park near the U.S. Botanic Garden and provides a welcome oasis for visitors. The Bartholdi Fountain is based on Classical and Renaissance forms and is an elegant expression of the Gilded Age in which it was created.

The Bartholdi Fountain was designed symmetrically in three identical sections. The fountain has a triangular base with turtles and large shells rises to the pedestal, from which three identical nereids (sea nymphs) rise on thirds. Between their feet are fish and scattered sea shells and coral. The nymphs, with arched backs, are caryatids, following a tradition of sculpture founded in classical Greece. They seem to hold up the large fountain basin, which is actually supported by the central column. The nymphs wear headdresses of leaves. Their clinging drapery, clasped by shells at the waist, reveals their supple figures. Despite its monumental size (it weighs approximately 40 tons and is 30 feet high, and the sculptured female figures are 11 feet tall), each element of the fountain is beautifully detailed.

The curved arms of the nereids lead the viewer's eye to the large basin above, which supports twelve lights. The fountain continues with three youthful tritons playfully holding out seaweed and is topped by a mural crown resembling a crenelated city wall. Water spills from the crown over the tritons and splashes into the upper basin, while jets shoot from the mouths of the fish and the turtles.
Frederic Auguste Bartholdi (1834-1904) created the Bartholdi Fountain for the 1876 International Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia. The fountain design was based on a model he had created in 1867. Bartholdi was also working on his design for the Statue of Liberty at the same time. The Bartholdi Fountain, cast in Paris by A. Durenne, was painted to look like bronze and placed at a focal point near the main entrance of the Exhibition grounds in Fairmount Park.
At the close of the Exhibition, the Bartholdi Fountain was purchased for $6,000 (half of its estimated value) by the United States government at the suggestion of Frederick Law Olmsted, the famous landscape architect who designed the Capitol Grounds. It was moved to Washington, D.C., in 1877 and placed at the base of Capitol Hill near the center line of the Mall, on what was then the Botanic Garden grounds.

When it was created, the fountain fused modern gas-lighting and cast-iron technologies with water and was intended to allegorically represent Light and Water. Bartholdi saw this work as symbolically appropriate for the modern city, and he hoped that many cities throughout the country would purchase castings. Actually only Reims, France, acquired one in 1885, and it is no longer extant.
The gas lamps made the fountain a popular attraction since it was one of the first monuments in the city of Washington to be brightly illuminated at night. The lights surrounding the basin were added in 1886, and the round glass globes replaced the original gas fixtures when the fountain was fitted for electric lighting in 1915.
During the 1927 relocation of the Botanic Garden, the fountain was dismantled and stored. In 1932, it was re-erected in its present location. The park where the fountain stands was renamed in honor of Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi in 1985.
The Bartholdi Fountain was restored in 1986. The rusted supporting bolts and rods and the plumbing and wiring were replaced. Dozens of layers of paint were sandblasted from the cast-iron surface, which was then given a new protective coating. The fountain basins were repaired and leveled so that the water now falls evenly. The top coat of paint was renewed in 1996.












Long-Evita-2




Long-Evita-2





Evita drapery hardware installation by Helser Brothers









long drapery rod







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