BLACK AND WHITE DRAPERY. BLACK AND

27 siječanj 2012


Black And White Drapery. Build Window Awning



Black And White Drapery





black and white drapery






    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)

  • The artistic arrangement of clothing in sculpture or painting

  • Cloth coverings hanging in loose folds

  • Long curtains of heavy fabric

  • cloth gracefully draped and arranged in loose folds





    black
  • the quality or state of the achromatic color of least lightness (bearing the least resemblance to white)

  • being of the achromatic color of maximum darkness; having little or no hue owing to absorption of almost all incident light; "black leather jackets"; "as black as coal"; "rich black soil"

  • Of the very darkest color; the opposite of white; colored like coal, due to the absence of or complete absorption of light

  • (of the sky or night) Completely dark due to nonvisibility of the sun, moon, or stars, normally because of dense cloud cover

  • Deeply stained with dirt

  • blacken: make or become black; "The smoke blackened the ceiling"; "The ceiling blackened"





    white
  • Of the color of milk or fresh snow, due to the reflection of most wavelengths of visible light; the opposite of black

  • Approaching such a color; very pale

  • Morally or spiritually pure; innocent and untainted

  • being of the achromatic color of maximum lightness; having little or no hue owing to reflection of almost all incident light; "as white as fresh snow"; "a bride's white dress"

  • whiten: turn white; "This detergent will whiten your laundry"

  • a member of the Caucasoid race











Rockefeller Guest House




Rockefeller Guest House





Turtle Bay, Manhattan

Designed by Philip C. Johnson in 1948 and built in 1949-50, the former Rockefeller Guest House is one of the earliest buildings in New York City to reflect the influence of the modem movement in architecture and the celebrated German-American architect Mies van der Rohe. The house, which was described by the noted architectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable as "sophisticated . . . handsome, unconventional," is remarkably intact.

Johnson's subtle and elegant design incorporates features borrowed from two earlier projects by Mies: his unbuilt "court houses" of the 1930s, and the elevations he designed for various buildings at the Illinois Institute of Technology (hereafter, IIT). Built without the use of traditional ornament, the striking two-story street facade is articulated with precisely arranged structural elements, including a symmetrical first story consisting of a handsome wood door and flanking polished reddish brown ironspot brick walls laid in Flemish bond, surmounted by a grid of six fixed translucent windows faced with four steel H-sections.

The house was commissioned by Blanchette Rockefeller, the wife of John D. Rockefeller 3rd and a major patron of the Museum of Modem Art (hereafter, MoMA), to display her collection of modem painting and sculpture and to entertain guests. The Rockefellers donated the house to the museum in 1955, and in the years that followed it had a succession of owners, many of whom were associated with the international art community, including Johnson who lived in the house from 1971 -79. A significant early work by one of the country's leading architects and his only private residential building in New York City, in May 1989 the Rockefeller Guest House became the first work of architecture in the city to be sold by a leading art auction house.

Design and Construction

In June 1948, the Empire Mortgage Company, acting on behalf of the Rockefeller family acquired a 25 by 100 foot lot on East 52nd Street, west of Second Avenue. It was an ideal location - midway between her home in Turtle Bay on Beekman Place and the museum. On the site were two vacant structures, both dating from circa 1870. Johnson later described them as "completely nondescript, [a] small house, wedged between brick walls, a gap and a weed patch, with a dumpy coach house."17 This sequence of spaces -closed, open, and closed-would shape Johnson's plan. Whereas most urban townhouses have gardens at the rear of the lot, the "gap" and "weed patch" would become an internal courtyard, filled with water and partly open to the sky.

An associate in Johnson's office, Frederick C. Genz, filed plans for the guest house in late 1948.18 Since the existing brick walls were retained, it was classified as an alteration, consisting of mainly plastering, plumbing, carpentry, and masonry work. The project's estimated cost was $64,000.19 Construction began in 1949, and the house was ready for use in 1950.

The Rockefeller Guest House was one the first buildings in New York City to reflect the influence of the modem movement in architecture and the celebrated German-American architect Mies van der Rohe. It would also be Johnson's first and only private residential building in the city. Located on the south side of 52nd Street, the simple two-story brick and glass facade stood in sharp contrast to the late nineteenth century buildings adjoining it, a tenement and schoolhouse.

Johnson's spartan design reflects two projects by Mies: the unbuilt "court houses" of the 1930s, where he explored the "flow of space . . . confined within a single rectangle formed by the outside walls of court and house conjoined," and the architect's elevations for the various buildings at HT which were notable for their "subtleties of detailing."20 In describing these facades, Johnson wrote in 1947:

Structural elements are revealed as are those of a Gothic cathedral . . . And whereas the medieval architect relied on the collaboration of the sculptor and painter for his ultimate effect, Mies, so to speak, had to perform the functions of all three professions. He joins steel to steel or steel to glass or brick, with the taste and skill that formerly went into the chiseling of a stone capital or the painting of a fresco.

Johnson followed Mies's example; rather than embellishing the guest house facade with traditional ornament, he articulated the street facade with precisely arranged structural elements. He divided the two-story facade into two visually-distinct sections. The lower portion of the first floor facade, which projects slightly in front of the windows, consists of a wood door at center flanked by polished reddish brown brick walls laid in Flemish bond. The brick, which resembled that used on the cylinder that enclosed the bathroom in Johnson's New Canaan residence of the previous year, was chosen to compliment the facade of the adjacent











black dress white drapery by catzilla




black dress white drapery by catzilla





inspired by Erte.









black and white drapery







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BLINDS :


Blinds : 80s Shutter Shades



Blinds





blinds






    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.

  • The dead-ends of the Mazes, it also means anything impossible or hopeless, as in, "He'll hit the blinds if he tries lying to the factol."

  • 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

  • Confuse or overawe someone with something difficult to understand

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











Blind(s)




Blind(s)





Blinds in my room. Kind of cool when the morning sun was coming through, looking like this.











BLIND GUARDIAN




BLIND GUARDIAN





Blind Guardian. Sala La Riviera. Madrid









blinds







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2 WOOD BLINDS - 2 WOOD


2 WOOD BLINDS - SILVER SAGE DRAPES.



2 Wood Blinds





2 wood blinds






    wood blinds
  • UpAvailable with 2" or 1" slats wood blinds are the perfect alternative to shutters. Made from basswood or ramin wood they are among the most beautiful and enduring window treatments available today. They are also very good natural insulators.

  • Made from various types of wood, these are popular horizontal blinds.

  • blinds manufactured with slats and valances made from premium basswood or imported hardwoods; wood blinds are lightweight and provide more insulation than blinds made from man-made materials or metal





    2
  • .2 Network (pronounced Dot-Two Network) is the name of an upcoming television network designed for digital television subchannels (hence the ".2") owned by Guardian Enterprise Group that will replace the GTN network on a date yet to be announced.

  • two: the cardinal number that is the sum of one and one or a numeral representing this number

  • two: being one more than one; "he received two messages"











damagedLiftCord




damagedLiftCord





2 inch wood blind pull cord that has cut through the plastic insert in the head rail. The cord is now rubbing against the metal edge of the head rail and will fray and break.











woodBlindFrayedString




woodBlindFrayedString





2 inch wood blind with a frayed pull cord.









2 wood blinds







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GREEN LAMP SHADES : GREEN LAMP


GREEN LAMP SHADES : SANWA SHUTTER : DOMETIC AE AWNINGS



Green Lamp Shades





green lamp shades






    lamp shades
  • (Lamp Shade) The shade serves the important function of blocking the glare from a light bulb and is usually the most decorative part of a lamp. The lamp shade can be made of glass, fabric, metal, or other more creative materials.

  • (lamp shade) lampshade: a protective ornamental shade used to screen a light bulb from direct view

  • (Lamp shade) A lampshade is a fixture that covers the lightbulb on a lamp to diffuse the light it emits. Conical, cylindrical and other forms on floor-, desk- or table top-mounted as well as suspended lamp models are the most common and are made in a wide range of materials.





    green
  • Consisting of fresh vegetables of this color

  • of the color between blue and yellow in the color spectrum; similar to the color of fresh grass; "a green tree"; "green fields"; "green paint"

  • Denoting a light or flag of this color used as a signal to proceed

  • turn or become green; "The trees are greening"

  • Of the color between blue and yellow in the spectrum; colored like grass or emeralds

  • concerned with or supporting or in conformity with the political principles of the Green Party











lilac green blue lamp




lilac green blue lamp





Taken today at studio class.
white frosty lamp on white see through table with barn doors and blue film attached to light under table shining up.
i like the different subtle shades it gives.(only my opinion)











GREEN LAMP SHADE




GREEN LAMP SHADE





green lamp shade









green lamp shades







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DARKENING ROMAN SHADES : ROMAN SHADES


DARKENING ROMAN SHADES : CANOPY FOR BABY CRIB.



Darkening Roman Shades





darkening roman shades






    roman shades
  • (Roman shade) A flat fabric shade that folds into neat horizontal pleats when raised.

  • (Roman Shade) A single sheet shade that rises up by lift cord in a tear drop or flat style that looks like an accordion folding up back and forth on itself. Reminds me of an opera house window treatment swag. Part of our Melhanna Shade collection.

  • (Roman Shade) This window treatment style consists of a fabric shade with wooden slats inserted horizontally at intervals down its entire length. It is raised and lowered via pull cord as with other blinds, but gathers soft folds as it does so.





    darkening
  • Make or become dark or darker

  • becoming dark or darker as from waning light or clouding over; "the darkening sky"

  • Make or become gloomy, angry, or unhappy

  • (darken) tarnish or stain; "a scandal that darkened the family's good name"

  • (of an unpleasant event or state of affairs) Cast a shadow over something; spoil

  • blackening: changing to a darker color











bomb




bomb





The two-part episode The Incident presents two stories in parallel: a science-fiction adventure involving time-travel, electro-magnetism, and a mad scientist hoping to change things with a hydrogen bomb; and a fantasy myth involving mortals enslaved by ancient demigods, trying to change things with a knife and sacrificial fire. (In keeping with the disclaimer introduced earlier, it must be noted that ‘science’ and ‘fantasy’ are terms loosely applied, and that perhaps even the Jacob story might craft a more plausible scientific explanation than the Incident itself.) This work of fiction exists somewhere at the intersection of drama, sci-fi, and fantasy, but wholly within the category of Mythology. The episode’s first images evoke the dawn of human culture, the harnessed power of fire, shelters made of rock, hand-spun clothing and sandals, and primitive tools to gather fish from the ocean. After mankind adapted the necessary technology to survive, his mind began to expand to other pursuits, darkening his bare walls to produce painted images, carving majestic statues into rock, weaving decorative tapestries dyed different colors, telling stories through language, and even building ships to explore the seas (and planes to conquer the skies). Although Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey still holds the record for the longest flash-forward in cinema history, the centuries-long transition after the opening scene achieves a similar narrative effect. Even though man has evolved from taming the Promethean fire to building Edison’s light bulb to unleashing the power of the atom, our civilization is still in its infancy. Human beings themselves have not matured at the same rate as our technological progress. “They come. They fight. They destroy. They corrupt. It always ends the same.” The same petty jealousies that motivated the biblical rivalry of Jacob and Esau, also inform our nuclear-age warfare. A doctor can now perform once-unthinkable paralysis-saving surgery on your spine, but can that same doctor ever fix his own backbone when dealing with his father? Even our artwork, after generations of progress from cave paintings to wireless transmission of digital media, have also taken us from Homer to New Kids on the Block.


LOCKE: Years later a visiting prince came into Michelangelo's studio and found the master staring at a single 18 foot block of marble. Then he knew that the rumors were true -- that Michelangelo had come in everyday for the last four months, stared at the marble, and gone home for his supper. So the prince asked the obvious -- what are you doing? And Michelangelo turned around and looked at him, and whispered, sto lavorando, I'm working. Three years later that block of marble was the statue of David.

Two special artifacts from this classic opening scene, which are revisited at the ending of the episode, deserve special attention. The first is Jacob’s tapestry. The meticulously hand-crafted decoration initially appears in incomplete form. He has emblazoned the top section of the tapestry with ancient Greek lettering, a phrase from Homer’s Odyssey: “May the Gods grant thee all that thy heart desires”. Under those letters, the Egyptian symbol of the Eye of Horus, a symbol of divine power, occupies the center, between two massive wings. When Ben arrives at the statue centuries later, Jacob’s masterpiece is complete. Arms stretch down from the eye, towards nine human figures, while two kings observe from both sides. The image offers a visual representation of Jacob’s long-term plan, to give each piece ‘a little push’ into place for his endgame. Presumably, those nine individuals correspond to Kate, Sawyer, Sayid, Ilana, Locke, Sun, Jin, Jack, and Hurley (although Ben might be the final person, as Ben received Jacob’s touch rather than Ilana). Much like the sequence of literal and figurative long cons that preceded this one, the tapestry doubles as a metaphor for the show’s writing process. The gods of this particular story, writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, strung the audience along for several years, slowly revealing pieces, painting each character with care, until it was time to unveil this man behind the curtain. Of course, they understood that the journey was more important than the final destination. As Jacob later confesses: “It takes a very long time when you're making the thread, but, uh... I suppose that's the point, isn't it?”.



Allusions to outside mythology, of course, occur quite frequently on Lost. For every direct reference that the show makes, there are a dozen other meaningful comparisons to be made, some intentional (such as Apollo the son of Zeus, or Everything That Rises Must Converge) but many others are merely fortuitous. Minds working independently across the globe tend to converge on the same core ideas or mythemes. Mythology scholars have produced a number of different theories to explain why authors from different cultures, without any direct contact, produce leg











[say moi] :-P




[say moi] :-P





There are various words referring to eyepieces with darkened lenses:
Shades is probably the most widely used term for sunglasses in North America.
Glares is a term popular in India if the glass is dark. If it is light then the term is "Coolers".
Sun spectacles is a term used by some opticians.
Spekkies is a term used predominantly in southern Australia.
Sun specs (also sunspecs) is the shortened form of sun spectacles.
Sunglass a monocle version.[citation needed]
Sun-shades can also refer to the sun-shading eyepiece-type, although the term is not exclusive to these. Also in use is the derivative abbreviation, shades.
Dark glasses (also preceded by pair of) - term in common usage.
Sunnies is Australian, UK and New Zealand slang
Smoked spectacles usually refers to the darkened eyepieces worn by blind people.
Solar shields Usually refers to models of sunglasses with large lenses.
Stunna shades Used as a slang term in the hyphy movement, usually referring to sunglasses with oversized lenses.
Locs (also maddoggers) is a brand of sunglasses worn by rappers, gangsters and cholos.
Glecks is Scottish slang for glasses or sunglasses.
Cooling glasses is a term used all across India and the Middle East for sunglasses.









darkening roman shades







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CANOPY CARS - CANOPY


Canopy cars - Rolladen hurricane shutters.



Canopy Cars





canopy cars






    canopy
  • the transparent covering of an aircraft cockpit

  • Something hanging or perceived as hanging over a person or scene

  • cover with a canopy

  • the umbrellalike part of a parachute that fills with air

  • An ornamental cloth covering hung or held up over something, esp. a throne or bed

  • A rooflike projection or shelter





    cars
  • A railroad car of a specified kind

  • (car) a wheeled vehicle adapted to the rails of railroad; "three cars had jumped the rails"

  • (car) the compartment that is suspended from an airship and that carries personnel and the cargo and the power plant

  • A vehicle that runs on rails, esp. a railroad car

  • (car) a motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine; "he needs a car to get to work"

  • A road vehicle, typically with four wheels, powered by an internal combustion engine and able to carry a small number of people











canopy




canopy





We were driving in Edmonton, I slammed on the breaks and jumped out of the car and took this shot.











Canopy Stops




Canopy Stops





Little pads we installed to keep the canopy from opening too far









canopy cars







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GROW GRASS SHADE : GROW GRASS


Grow Grass Shade : Floor Lamp With Mica Shade : 4 Prong Drapery Hooks.



Grow Grass Shade





grow grass shade






    grass
  • narrow-leaved green herbage: grown as lawns; used as pasture for grazing animals; cut and dried as hay

  • Ground covered with grass

  • Pastureland

  • shoot down, of birds

  • cover with grass; "The owners decided to grass their property"

  • Vegetation consisting of typically short plants with long narrow leaves, growing wild or cultivated on lawns and pasture, and as a fodder crop





    shade
  • Comparative darkness and coolness caused by shelter from direct sunlight

  • shadow: cast a shadow over

  • The darker part of a picture

  • represent the effect of shade or shadow on

  • A shadow or area of darkness

  • relative darkness caused by light rays being intercepted by an opaque body; "it is much cooler in the shade"; "there's too much shadiness to take good photographs"





    grow
  • turn: pass into a condition gradually, take on a specific property or attribute; become; "The weather turned nasty"; "She grew angry"

  • Produce by cultivation

  • become larger, greater, or bigger; expand or gain; "The problem grew too large for me"; "Her business grew fast"

  • (of a living thing) Undergo natural development by increasing in size and changing physically; progress to maturity

  • increase in size by natural process; "Corn doesn't grow here"; "In these forests, mushrooms grow under the trees"; "her hair doesn't grow much anymore"

  • (of a plant) Germinate and develop











New Patio




New Patio





We spent Memorial Weekend laying this thing using pavers that are too heavy for me to even lift. I put dwarf mondo grass in the inner cracks and Big Blue Liriope around the perimeter.











And the green grass grows all around




And the green grass grows all around





More poincianas









grow grass shade







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GRASS FOR SHADED AREAS : GRASS FOR


Grass for shaded areas : Drapery fabric lining : Canopy curtains for kids.



Grass For Shaded Areas





grass for shaded areas






    shaded
  • (of pictures or drawings) drawn or painted with degrees or gradations of shadow; "the shaded areas of the face seemed to recede"

  • Darken or color (an illustration or diagram) with parallel pencil lines or a block of color

  • Cover, moderate, or exclude the light of

  • (shade) relative darkness caused by light rays being intercepted by an opaque body; "it is much cooler in the shade"; "there's too much shadiness to take good photographs"

  • Screen from direct light

  • protected from heat and light with shade or shadow; "shaded avenues"; "o'er the shaded billows rushed the night"- Alexander Pope





    grass
  • narrow-leaved green herbage: grown as lawns; used as pasture for grazing animals; cut and dried as hay

  • Ground covered with grass

  • cover with grass; "The owners decided to grass their property"

  • Pastureland

  • shoot down, of birds

  • Vegetation consisting of typically short plants with long narrow leaves, growing wild or cultivated on lawns and pasture, and as a fodder crop





    areas
  • A region or part of a town, a country, or the world

  • A part of an object or surface

  • (area) a part of an animal that has a special function or is supplied by a given artery or nerve; "in the abdominal region"

  • A space allocated for a specific purpose

  • (area) a subject of study; "it was his area of specialization"; "areas of interest include"

  • (area) a particular geographical region of indefinite boundary (usually serving some special purpose or distinguished by its people or culture or geography); "it was a mountainous area"; "Bible country"











Burning off the morning fog




Burning off the morning fog





I went for a morning photo walkabout in a local natural area. I shot lots of bracketed raw images which I am just starting to get through now. However, some of my twitter peeps are growing impatient and need to seem some samples.

Shot at 8:05 am when the sun had just peeked over the tree line. There was a billowing curtain of fog lifting up from the grasses as the sun started to warm the area. You'll notice a slight rainbow effect near the top left just past center. That was an added bonus.

Overall I don't feel it was the greatest composition, I was going for lines between light and shade, but overall it captured the essence of what the morning was about... morning.











School Board Candidate Angie Cardoza 2468




School Board Candidate Angie  Cardoza 2468





Candidate for Santa Clara County School Board Trustee, Area 6









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HOW TO CLEAN CANVAS AWNINGS. HOW TO CLEAN


How To Clean Canvas Awnings. Quick Shade Commercial



How To Clean Canvas Awnings





how to clean canvas awnings






    awnings
  • An awning or overhang is a secondary covering attached to the exterior wall of a building. It is typically composed of canvas woven of acrylic, cotton or polyester yarn, or vinyl laminated to polyester fabric that is stretched tightly over a light structure of aluminium, iron or steel, possibly

  • (awning) a canopy made of canvas to shelter people or things from rain or sun

  • (awning) A rooflike cover, usually of canvas, extended over or before any place as a shelter from the sun, rain, or wind; That part of the poop deck which is continued forward beyond the bulkhead of the cabin

  • A sheet of canvas or other material stretched on a frame and used to keep the sun or rain off a storefront, window, doorway, or deck





    how to
  • A how-to or a how to is an informal, often short, description of how to accomplish some specific task. A how-to is usually meant to help non-experts, may leave out details that are only important to experts, and may also be greatly simplified from an overall discussion of the topic.

  • (How To’s) Multi-Speed Animations

  • Practical advice on a particular subject; that gives advice or instruction on a particular topic





    canvas
  • a heavy, closely woven fabric (used for clothing or chairs or sails or tents)

  • an oil painting on canvas fabric

  • canvass: solicit votes from potential voters in an electoral campaign

  • A piece of such cloth prepared for use as the surface for an oil painting

  • A strong, coarse unbleached cloth made from hemp, flax, cotton, or a similar yarn, used to make items such as sails and tents and as a surface for oil painting

  • An oil painting





    clean
  • Having been washed since last worn or used

  • (of paper) Not yet marked by writing or drawing

  • free from dirt or impurities; or having clean habits; "children with clean shining faces"; "clean white shirts"; "clean dishes"; "a spotlessly clean house"; "cats are clean animals"

  • clean and jerk: a weightlift in which the barbell is lifted to shoulder height and then jerked overhead

  • make clean by removing dirt, filth, or unwanted substances from; "Clean the stove!"; "The dentist cleaned my teeth"

  • Free from dirt, marks, or stains











Tratman & Lowther Ltd (Bristol)




Tratman & Lowther Ltd (Bristol)





Article Published in the Illustrated Bristol News 1962.

THE ROOTS OF TRATMAN AND LOWTHER LTD., the Bristol firm of ships stores merchants and sailmakers, are buried deep in the days when the city’s waterfront stretched far into what is now the traffic-congested, garden-decked Centre.

Let us take a look at the scene as it was then. . . . A lively one, certainly. Sailing ships jostled each other along the quay-side. They heaved a tangle of intricately-rigged masts. There was a smell of tar and old rope. Piles of cargo, perhaps casks of rum, molasses, sugar, dye-woods, tobacco, were abundant. But everywhere, activity, for this was Bristol, the home of the Merchant Venturer, altogether forward-looking, prosperous, industrious.

A fitting birthplace, then, for a firm which this year celebrates its 150th anniversary in its offices in Broad Quay overlooking the Centre that was once the hub, the very reason, almost, for its existence.

Tratman and Lowther was founded in 1812. Two brothers, both Bristolians, whose ancestors had a part share in merchants ships, set up business at the corner of Thunderbolt Street (alas no longer with us) and Narrow Quay. They traded, under the name of Tratman Bros., in ships’ stores, sails, ropes, canvas, and a thousand other items needed in the maritime hurly burly of Bristol, the port, the mariner’s city.

Those early days, of course, were the days of true craftsmanship, of skills which have long been killed by modernisation and industrialisation. Tratman’s depended very largely on the skill of the blacksmith, the rigger, the sailmaker. They had their own forge. Anchors were shaped, chains mended, rigging checked. And sails, the mainstay of the trade, were made, too. These were expertly sewn by leather-protected hands. They were taken Out to the quayside and treated with fish oil. This process was ‘proofing’, designed to make the sails water and rot proof.

Mr. James Beresford Lowther, the firm’s managing director, whose family came into the business after the First World War, says of those early days in the company’s history: ‘I suppose it all started when ships went out from here loaded with all sorts of trinkets. Old army coats, coloured glass, goodness knows what. Yes, our men were craftsmen. They had to be. Take riggers. They had to know everything about splicing. Craftsmen in their own right. Staff were taken on as needed. Sail-making? Very important. Sails were, after all, the engines of the ships. But with the turn of sail to steam trade inevitably slackened off. It had to happen’.

Tratmans moved to Broad Quay about 1860. A sail loft was set up. Sail-making continued to play a major part in the firm’s business. But conversion from sail to steam meant less prosperous times. A smaller staff was carried. They did not lose heart. It was more or less on this basis that Tratman’s kept going. Came the end of the 1914-18 war and the return to Bristol of Mr. John Edwards Tratman. That proved to be a hallmark for the company.

‘Old’ Mr. Tratman, as he became known, had carried on the business through the war. The home-coming of Mr. John Edwards Tratman coincided with the return to Bristol of Mr. Edward Charles Lowther, a merchant seaman, son of a Bristol corn merchant, who had been round the world in sailing ships. The two went into partnership (Mr. ‘Jimmy’ Lowther is now chairman of the company) and set out to rebuild the business. They met with success. A painting agency was acquired, then a rope-making firm at Falmouth and a wire-rope firm at Plymouth.

Business went ahead. It expanded quite considerably between the wars. During the last war the company did much for the Admiralty. Awnings and blackout equipment were made. Tratman and Lowther kept abreast, however, of their peacetime training. There was a memorable occasion when they had to store a Dutch hospital ship at short notice. They did it complete with the one million cigarettes.

Ships’ supplies, such as tobacco, bottles of spirits and wines, are sent out from the firm’s bonded warehouse in Anchor Road. Luckily, the war brought little damage to their property. In fact, Tratman and Lowther expanded their premises in Broad Quay. They took over the next door building, No. 19, a former boarding house and restaurant, and turned the bottom floor into a yacht department.

Meanwhile, Mr. John Edwards Tratman had died, and so was severed the last surviving link with the founders.

The yacht and boating facet of the business has been very successful. Mr. Beresford Lowther comments: ‘It’s grown fantastically in the last few years. Boating has become very much a family pastime. Prices haven’t risen too steeply. Lots of people beetle off at weekends. There’s the car with the dingy trailer behind. Altogether a family influence in this side of the trade’.

Tratman and Lowther can supply anything remotely connected with the boating line. Ropes, motors, sails, foul-weather clothing. And, of course, the boats as well. You can even buy f











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GRP DOOR CANOPIES : GRP DOOR


Grp door canopies : Awning canvas fabric.



Grp Door Canopies





grp door canopies






    canopies
  • (canopy) the transparent covering of an aircraft cockpit

  • An ornamental cloth covering hung or held up over something, esp. a throne or bed

  • A rooflike projection or shelter

  • (canopy) the umbrellalike part of a parachute that fills with air

  • Something hanging or perceived as hanging over a person or scene

  • (canopied) covered with or as with a canopy; "a canopied bed"; "streets canopied by stately trees"





    door
  • A doorway

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

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

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

  • 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"

  • 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"





    grp
  • Glass-reinforced plastic

  • (GRP’s (Gross Rating Points)) The total number of rating points achieved for a particular period of time or schedule of advertisements.

  • (GRPs) Gross rating points reflect the accumulated audience exposed. Individuals may be counted more than once. It’s calculated by counting the gross impressions, dividing by the target population and multiplying by 100.

  • (GRPS) GPRS is a extension to GSM which connects to the Internet from a wirelss device faster than GSM but much slower than 3G.











Canopy




Canopy





Canopy ~

Lush tropical foliage offers shelter from a surprise afternoon shower

Textures by Cathairstudios on Flickr













Canopy




Canopy





Canopy of a tree, taken by pointing a camera straight up and taking a photo while under the tree









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