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  • Custom Woodwork

    Custom Woodwork

    Custom Woodwork

    Rural MD: read through the indicator

    Posted by henk.sijgers (on when I can) on 2014-04-29 01:10:43

    Tagged: , 45mm , obtainable-light-weight , black , blue , brick , day , em5 , environmentally friendly , m43 , md , metallic , nik , orange , pink , trip-shots , rural , wooden

    #home furniture #Diy #woodwork #woodworking #freedownload#woodworkingprojects #woodsmith ,wood craft, wood planer, fine woodworking, wood chairs, wood operating tools, preferred woodworking, woodworking books, woodworking workbench strategies

  • Alps – Panorama – Fiss/Ladis –

    Alps – Panorama – Fiss/Ladis –

    Alps - Panorama - Fiss/Ladis -

    Alps

    The Alps are one of the great mountain range systems of Europe stretching approximately 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) across eight Alpine countries from Austria and Slovenia in the east, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Germany, and France to the west, and Italy and Monaco to the south. The mountains were formed over tens of millions of years as the African and Eurasian tectonic plates collided. Extreme shortening caused by the event resulted in marine sedimentary rocks rising by thrusting and folding into high mountain peaks such as Mont Blanc and the Matterhorn. Mont Blanc spans the French–Italian border, and at 4,810 m (15,781 ft) is the highest mountain in the Alps. The Alpine region area contains about a hundred peaks higher than 4,000 m (13,123 ft), known as the "four-thousanders".

    The altitude and size of the range affects the climate in Europe; in the mountains precipitation levels vary greatly and climatic conditions consist of distinct zones. Wildlife such as ibex live in the higher peaks to elevations of 3,400 m (11,155 ft), and plants such as Edelweiss grow in rocky areas in lower elevations as well as in higher elevations. Evidence of human habitation in the Alps goes back to the Paleolithic era. A mummified man, determined to be 5,000 years old, was discovered on a glacier at the Austrian–Italian border in 1991. By the 6th century BC, the Celtic La Tène culture was well established. Hannibal famously crossed the Alps with a herd of elephants, and the Romans had settlements in the region. In 1800 Napoleon crossed one of the mountain passes with an army of 40,000. The 18th and 19th centuries saw an influx of naturalists, writers, and artists, in particular the Romantics, followed by the golden age of alpinism as mountaineers began to ascend the peaks. In World War II, Adolf Hitler kept a base of operation in the Bavarian Alps throughout the war.

    The Alpine region has a strong cultural identity. The traditional culture of farming, cheesemaking, and woodworking still exists in Alpine villages, although the tourist industry began to grow early in the 20th century and expanded greatly after World War II to become the dominant industry by the end of the century. The Winter Olympic Games have been hosted in the Swiss, French, Italian, Austrian and German Alps. At present the region is home to 14 million people and has 120 million annual visitors.

    The English word Alps derives from the Latin Alpes (through French). Maurus Servius Honoratus, an ancient commentator of Virgil, says in his commentary (A. X 13) that all high mountains are called Alpes by Celts. The term may be common to Italo-Celtic, because the Celtic languages have terms for high mountains derived from alp.

    This may be consistent with the theory that in Latin Alpes is a name of non-Indo-European origin (which is common for prominent mountains and mountain ranges in the Mediterranean region). According to the Old English Dictionary, the Latin Alpes might possibly derive from a pre-Indo-European word *alb "hill", with Albania being a related derivation. Interestingly, Albania (which is a foreign name for modern Albanians) has been used as a name for a number of mountainous areas across Europe. In Roman times, Albania was a name for the eastern Caucasus, while in the English language Albania (or Albany) was occasionally used as a name for Scotland.

    In modern languages the term alp, alm, albe or alpe refers to a grazing pastures in the alpine regions below the glaciers, not the peaks. An alp refers to a high mountain pasture where cows are taken to be grazed during the summer months and where hay barns can be found, and the term "the Alps", referring to the mountains, is a misnomer. The term for the mountain peaks varies by nation and language: words such as horn, kogel, gipfel, spitz, and berg are used in German speaking regions: mont, pic, dent and aiguille in French speaking regions; and monte or cima in Italian speaking regions.

    Geography

    The Alps extend in an arc from France in the south and west to Slovenia in the east, and from Monace in the south to Germany in the north.
    The Alps are a crescent shaped geographic feature of central Europe that ranges in a 800 km (500 mi) arc from east to west and is 200 km (120 mi) in width. The mean height of the mountain peaks is 2.5 km (1.6 mi). The range stretches from the Mediterranean Sea north above the Po river basin, extending through France from Grenoble, eastward through mid and southern Switzerland. The range continues toward Vienna in Austria, and east to the Adriatic Sea and into Slovenia. To the south it dips into northern Italy and to the north extends to the south border of Bavaria in Germany. In areas like Chiasso, Switzerland, and Neuschwanstein, Bavaria, the demarkation between the mountain range and the flatlands are clear; in other places such as Geneva, the demarkation is less clear. The countries with the greatest alpine territory are Switzerland, France, Austria and Italy.

    The highest portion of the range is divided by the glacial trough of the Rhone valley, with the Pennine Alps from Mont Blanc to the Matterhorn and Monte Rosa on the Southern side, and the Bernese Alps on the Northern. The peaks in the easterly portion of the range, in Austria and Slovenia, are smaller than those in the central and western portions.

    The variances in nomenclature in the region spanned by the Alps makes classification of the mountains and subregions difficult, but a general classification is that of the Eastern Alps and Western Alps with the divide between the two occurring in eastern Switzerland according to geologist Stefan Schmid, near the Splügen Pass.

    The highest peaks of the Western Alps and Eastern Alps, respectively, are Mont Blanc, at 4,810 m (15,780 ft)[13] and Piz Bernina at 4,049 metres (13,284 ft). The second-highest peaks are Monte Rosa at 4,634 m (15,200 ft) and Ortler at 3,905 m (12,810 ft), respectively

    Series of lower mountain ranges run parallel to the main chain of the Alps, including the French Prealps in France and the Jura Mountains in Switzerland and France. The secondary chain of the Alps follows the watershed from the Mediterranean Sea to the Wienerwald, passing over many of the highest and most well-known peaks in the Alps. From the Colle di Cadibona to Col de Tende it runs westwards, before turning to the northwest and then, near the Colle della Maddalena, to the north. Upon reaching the Swiss border, the line of the main chain heads approximately east-northeast, a heading it follows until its end near Vienna.

    Passes

    The Alps have been crossed for war and commerce, and by pilgrims, students and tourists. Crossing routes by road, train or foot are known as passes, and usually consist of depressions in the mountains in which a valley leads from the plains and hilly pre-mountainous zones. In the medieval period hospices were established by religious orders at the summits of many of the main passes. The most important passes are the Col de l’Iseran (the highest), the Brenner Pass, the Mont-Cenis, the Great St. Bernard Pass, the Col de Tende, the Gotthard Pass, the Semmering Pass, and the Stelvio Pass.

    Crossing the Italian-Austrian border, the Brenner Pass separates the Ötztal Alps and Zillertal Alps and has been in use as a trading route since the 14th century. The lowest of the Alpine passes at 985 m (3,232 ft), the Semmering crosses from Lower Austria to Styria; since the 12th century when a hospice was built there it has seen continuous use. A railroad with a tunnel 1 mile (1.6 km) long was built along the route of the pass in the mid-19th century. With a summit of 2,469 m (8,100 ft), the Great St. Bernard Pass is one of the highest in the Alps, crossing the Italian-Swiss border east of the Pennine Alps along the flanks of Mont Blanc. The pass was used by Napoleon Bonaparte to cross 40,000 troops in 1800. The Saint Gotthard Pass crosses from Central Switzerland to Ticino; in the late 19th century the 14 km (9 mi) long Saint Gotthard Tunnel was built connecting Lucerne in Switzerland, with Milan in Italy. The Mont Cenis pass has been a major commercial road between Western Europe and Italy. Now the pass has been supplanted by the Fréjus Road and Rail tunnel. At 2,756 m (9,042 ft), the Stelvio Pass in northern Italy is one of the highest of the Alpine passes; the road was built in the 1820s.[15] The highest pass in the alps is the col de l’Iseran in Savoy (France) at 2,770 m (9,088 ft).

    Alpine orogeny and Geology of the Alps
    Important geological concepts were established as naturalists began studying the rock formations of the Alps in the 18th century. In the mid-19th century the now defunct theory of geosynclines was used to explain the presence of "folded" mountain chains but by the mid-20th century the theory of plate tectonics became widely accepted.

    geologists.
    The formation of the Alps (the Alpine orogeny) was an episodic process that began about 300 million years ago. In the Paleozoic Era the Pangaean supercontinent consisted of a single tectonic plate; it broke into separate plates during the Mesozoic Era and the Tethys sea developed between Laurasia and Gondwana during the Jurassic Period. The Tethys was later squeezed between colliding plates causing the formation of mountain ranges called the Alpide belt, from Gibraltar through the Himalayas to Indonesia—a process that began at the end of the Mesozoic and continues into the present. The formation of the Alps was a segment of this orogenic process, caused by the collision between the African and the Eurasian plates that began in the late Cretaceous Period.

    Under extreme compressive stresses and pressure, marine sedimentary rocks were uplifted, creating characteristic recumbent folds, or nappes, and thrust faults. As the rising peaks underwent erosion, a layer of marine flysch sediments was deposited in the foreland basin, and the sediments became involved in younger nappes (folds) as the orogeny progressed. Coarse sediments from the continual uplift and erosion were later deposited in foreland areas as molasse. The molasse regions in Switzerland and Bavaria were well-developed and saw further upthrusting of flysch.

    The Alpine orogeny occurred in ongoing cycles through to the Paleogene causing differences in nappe structures, with a late-stage orogeny causing the development of the Jura Mountains. A series of tectonic events in the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods caused different paleogeographic regions. The Alps are subdivided by different lithology (rock composition) and nappe structure according to the orogenic events that affected them The geological subdivision differentiates the Western, Eastern Alps and Southern Alps: the Helveticum in the north, the Penninicum and Austroalpine system in the center and, south of the Periadriatic Seam, the Southern Alpine system.

    Compressed metamorphosed Tethyan sediments and their oceanic basement are sandwiched between the tip of the Matterhorn, which consists of gneisses originally part of the African plate, and the base of the peak, which is part of the Eurasian plate.
    According to geologist Stefan Schmid, because the Western Alps underwent a metamorphic event in the Cenozoic Era while the Austroalpine peaks underwent an event in the Cretaceous Period, the two areas show distinct differences in nappe formations. Flysch deposits in the Southern Alps of Lombardy probably occurred in the Cretaceous or later.

    Peaks in France, Italy and Switzerland lie in the "Houlliere zone", which consists of basement with sediments from the Mesozoic Era. High "massifs" with external sedimentary cover are more common in the Western Alps and were affected by Neogene Period thin-skinned thrusting whereas the Eastern Alps have comparatively few high peaked massifs. Similarly the peaks in Switzerland extending to western Austria (Helvetic nappes) consist of thin-skinned sedimentary folding that detached from former basement rock.

    In simple terms the structure of the Alps consists of layers of rock of European, African and oceanic (Tethyan) origin. The bottom nappe structure is of continental European origin, above which are stacked marine sediment nappes, topped off by nappes derived from the African plate. The Matterhorn is an example of the ongoing orogeny and shows evidence of great folding. The tip of the mountain consists of gneisses from the African plate; the base of the peak, below the glaciated area, consists of European basement rock. The sequence of Tethyan marine sediments and their oceanic basement is sandwiched between rock derived from the African and European plates.

    The core regions of the Alpine orogenic belt have been folded and fractured in such a manner that erosion created the characteristic steep vertical peaks of the Swiss Alps that rise seemingly straight out of the foreland areas. Peaks such as Mont Blanc, the Matterhorn, and high peaks in the Pennine Alps, the Briançonnais, and Hohe Tauern consist of layers of rock from the various orogenies including exposures of basement rock.

    "Four-thousanders" and ascents
    The Union Internationale des Associations d’Alpinisme (UIAA) has defined a list of 82 "official" Alpine summits that reach at least 4,000 m (13,123 ft). The list includes not only mountains, but also subpeaks with little prominence that are considered important mountaineering objectives. Below are listed the 22 "four-thousanders" with at least 500 m (1,640 ft) of prominence.

    While Mont Blanc was first climbed in 1786, most of the Alpine four-thousanders were climbed during the first half of the 19th century; the ascent of the Matterhorn in 1865 marked the end of the golden age of alpinism. Karl Blodig (1859–1956) was among the first to successfully climb all the major 4,000 m peaks. He completed his series of ascents in 1911.

    The first British Mont Blanc ascent was in 1788; the first female ascent in 1819. By the mid-1850s Swiss mountaineers had ascended most of the peaks and were eagerly sought as mountain guides. Edward Whymper reached the top of the Matterhorn in 1865 (after seven attempts), and in 1938 the last of the six great north faces of the Alps was climbed with the first ascent of the Eiger Nordwand (north face of the Eiger).

    Posted by shoot it! on 2014-08-25 07:28:37

    Tagged: , Alps , Alpen , Sky , skiing , winter , snow , sneeuw , top , mountain , mountains , berg , bergen , skieen , wintersport , wintersports , Austria , oostenrijk , Fiss , Ladis , 2011 , panorama , panoramic , landscape , Photoshop , CS5 , Photoshop CS5 , Powershot , G10 , Canon Powershot G10 , blue , Marco , Struijlaart , Marco Struijlaart

    #furniture #DIY #woodwork #woodworking #freedownload#woodworkingprojects #woodsmith ,wood craft, wood planer, fine woodworking, wooden chairs, wood working tools, popular woodworking, woodworking books, woodworking workbench plans

  • Completed blue paneled room

    Completed blue paneled room

    Completed blue paneled room

    Wall paneling: Bristol board and cereal box cardboard
    Doors: still left is a faux doorway – Home Functions 6 panel inside doorway.
    Right is an exterior doorway – Mayberry Avenue Yorktown doorway from Passion Foyer
    Flooring: extensive plank Household Works
    Chair rail molding and baseboards: Interest Foyer, they no more time have these styles
    Crown molding: from a Miniatures retail store on Ebay
    Door knobs and vital hole: Classics, repainted aged bronze

    Downstairs home reno
    Teenage dollhouse addition transform task
    Simplicity dollhouse by Actual Good Toys
    1:12 colonial fashion dwelling

    Posted by Cunning Belle on 2019-03-23 09:50:49

    Tagged: , paneling , wall , trim , woodwork , chair , rail , early , american , dollhouse , 1:12 , in shape , fitting , lower , maintenance , how , tutorial , progress , craft , do-it-yourself , colonial , wood , simplicity , doorway , doorknob , paint , repaint , tough , wood , flooring , broad , plank , 19th , century , 18th , finished , room , doll , blue , white , pale , smooth , shabby , panelling

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  • First Baptist Church Valdosta, 200 W Central Avenue, Valdosta, Georgia, USA / Built: 1900

    First Baptist Church Valdosta, 200 W Central Avenue, Valdosta, Georgia, USA / Built: 1900

    First Baptist Church Valdosta, 200 W Central Avenue, Valdosta, Georgia, USA / Built: 1900

    THE Beginning: To start with Baptist Church of Valdosta in fact commenced in Troupville over 150 many years in the past. The very first settlers arrived to South Ga in 1821. On June 21, 1840, a Missionary Baptist Church organized at the property of James O. Goldwire. First Baptist was at first constituted underneath the name of the Minimal River Baptist Church. There had been 7 charter associates, two of whom ended up black.

    THE EARLY Several years: In excess of the upcoming 4 decades worship companies were being held in residences and the Courtroom Property. Their new church building was finished in 1844 and supplied a new title, Troupville Baptist Church. In1842, $20 was subscribed for missions. Shortly just after, Central Church, “An Arm of the Church,” was constructed about 10 miles away. Slaves have been among the its associates. In 1847, Ebenezer, a further “Arm of the Church,” was formed some twelve miles absent.

    THE Transfer TO VALDOSTA: The coming of railroads necessitated a shift to the new city, Valdosta. In 1860-61, users dismantled their church developing, together with the church bell, and moved to the corner of Valley and Ashley Streets. About two years later, the building was wrecked by a storm, and for the upcoming three to five a long time worship companies were being held in a school household. In 1863, the minutes refer to the church as the Baptist Church of Christ. From 1865 to 1907, it was identified as the Baptist Church of Valdosta.

    THE SANCTUARY: In 1896 a ton on Toombs Road in between West Central Avenue and Valley Street was acquired and construction on a new church creating started. Just after four a long time, on November 18, 1900, the church was committed personal debt cost-free, to the glory of God. Information do not reveal the expense, but by June 1893, a total of $13,000 was put in on the building. The little ones of the Sunday Faculty lessons purchased just one brick just about every and a fund-elevating campaign in 1899 netted $6,000. The curly pine woodwork was donated by W.S. Fender. The stained glass in the home windows is reputed to have arrive from Italy. On December 13, 1908, the Organ Committee recommended the purchase of a Pilcher organ, the utmost charge set at $3,000. Other properties additional have been the Sunday Faculty Annex to the Sanctuary in 1926 and the Children’s Developing and the Langdale Chapel in 1956. Our present Children’s Creating was made in 2006 and the outdated children’s creating was renovated into grownup training room in 2007. It was dedicated in honor of Mac Weaver, our Associate Pastor for over 43 a long time.

    On January 10, 2016 our new Spouse and children Lifestyle Centre was devoted to the glory of God with an emphasis on carrying on the ministry of God from “Generation to Generation: G2G”. The modern constructing involves a youth facility on the 2nd floor and a substantial fellowship corridor which is applied for 8:44 present-day services, concerts, banquets, church family members meals and considerably far more.

    Lengthy TENURE PASTORS: According to the official church heritage, Initial Baptist Church has been blessed with committed pastors who served for a quantity of decades. The very first pastor, William B. Cooper served 14 decades from 1840 to 1854. William H. Goldwire served 14 yrs from 1854 to 1868. T. Baron Gibson served 18 a long time from 1935-1953. James P. Rodgers experienced served 14 years when he died of a coronary heart assault in June of 1967. The 20th pastor, James E. Pitts, served 23 yrs from 1967-1990. For the duration of Reverend Pitts’ ministry, 2,942 persons were being acquired into FBC fellowship. Delos Sharpton came to FBC in August 1991 and served as our pastor right up until November 1999. Dr. Ches Smith served as our Interim Pastor from January 2000 right until July 2001. On the to start with of August 2001, Dr. Philip West was welcomed into our church household and served until finally March 2013. Dr. Milton Gardner, who served as pastor of Initially Baptist Church in Thomasville, Ga for 31 a long time, served as Interim Pastor from April 2013 till July 2014. After constant prayer for God’s will, our committee identified the individual God selected to be our upcoming pastor. In August 2014, Charles “Chuck” Owens joined the FBC church family serving as our Senior Pastor.

    Credit rating for the facts earlier mentioned is supplied to the adhering to internet websites:
    fbcvaldosta.org/
    qpublic.schneidercorp.com/Software.aspx?AppID=631&…

    © All Legal rights Reserved – you might not use this image in any type devoid of my prior permission.

    Posted by Photographer South Florida on 2020-02-24 00:56:02

    Tagged: , Very first Baptist Church Valdosta , 200 W Central Avenue , Valdosta , Georgia , Usa , Built: 1900 , 1st , Baptist , Church , 200 , W , Central , Avenue , Constructed: , 1900 , Lowndes , County , south , holy , position , worship , Peach , Point out , white , American , Flag , stree , pictures , making , steeple , blue , sky , faith , spiritual business

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  • Woodworking

    Woodworking

    Woodworking

    Posted by shioshvili on 2015-12-03 16:29:47

    Tagged: , morocco , marrakesh , woodworking , carved , previous , blue

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