Esther's photos with the keyword: clock

Just past one

07 Aug 2021 24 17 157
The Saturday Self-Challenge: arrows TSSC20210807 130206

Seven o'clock and all is well (Explored)

01 Aug 2021 15 16 135
The Sunday Challenge: Still life representing 7:00 Elephant clock TSCIMG 5662

Twenty-one past who knows what (Explored)

14 Sep 2019 29 28 269
For the Saturday Self-Challenge: Use the edge of an image to "cut" your subject in half" (subject can be anything.) I used the posterize effect in Photoshop Elements to make it more dramatic. TSSC20190913 212935M

Noting time

20 Jul 2019 3 4 127
A nearly life-size sculpture and clock in the Capitol building in Washington, D.C. AIMG 9960-1

The moon is almost full (Explored)

20 Jan 2019 23 15 280
The Sunday Challenge: Anything to do with the moon. "The grandfather moon dial clock began appearing during the early part of the 18th century. Tall clocks, during this period, were made by hand. Many wealthy squires took delight in owning a beautiful tall clock that not only told time, but also should the moon's phase. Knowing the correct moon phase was important to those living an agrarian lifestyle. Night trips on horseback, or by coach, were much safer during the light of a full moon. Additionally, farmers could harvest crops under a full moon. Unfortunately, moon dials also aided the Highwaymen and other criminals of the era. Under the cover of darkness that a new moon offered, criminals could perform dastardly deeds without being identified by their victims. The Grandfather Moon Dial clock is actually a highly accurate lunar calendar and displays the different phases of the moon during a given lunar month. A lunar month consists of one complete lunar phase cycle, which is equal to 29 days, 12 hours, 44 minutes, and 3 seconds. You will see the number 29.5 engraved, above the rotating moon dial, on most Grandfather clocks. " ticktocktony.com/Antique-Clock-History/moon-dial-history.html TSCIMG 8898

Tempus Fugit

04 Jan 2019 2 1 160
"Object Type This monumental clock is a large version of a bracket clock. It was made in about 1865 and looks like a building, with columns supporting a decorated roof. Both the sturdy construction and the architectural form are examples of the Gothic Revival style. The front is enamelled with patterns inspired by Celtic designs. People Bruce Talbert (1838-1881) was a very successful commercial designer who designed metalwork, furniture, textiles, carpets, wallpapers and stained glass. His influential book, 'Gothic Forms Applied to Furniture, Metal Work and Decoration for Domestic Purposes', published in 1868, illustrated a range of designs in the Gothic Revival style. He worked on both architectural schemes and on furniture for Skidmores of Coventry, prominent manufacturers of architectural metalwork, who made this clock in about 1865. Time The Gothic Revival style was very popular in the 1860s and 1870s in Britain. It is characterised by the use of architectural forms and details, often taken from ecclesiastical sources, for domestic objects. This clock, which looks like a building, shows how commercial designers and manufacturers used the Gothic Revival style." collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O61450/clock-talbert-bruce-james AIMG 6426

The face of time (Explored)

Midday hours

04 Jan 2015 13 21 403
For the Sunday Challenge: Middle of the day AIMG 4588

India Wharf

09 Sep 2014 7 8 666
View from the Boston Harbor showing the Custom House Tower in the background.

Baroque clock

27 Aug 2012 258
Baroque clock by Bartolomeo Monopola overlooking the courtyard of the Doges Palace. The Doge's Palace (Italian: Palazzo Ducale) is a palace built in Venetian Gothic style, and one of the main landmarks of the city of Venice, northern Italy. The palace was the residence of the Doge of Venice, the supreme authority of the Republic of Venice, opening as a museum in 1923. Today it is one of the 11 museums run by the Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doge%27s_Palace,_Venice AIMG_4778

Trogir clock tower

15 May 2012 1 248
Trogir, Croatia has a long history. "In the 3rd century BC, Tragurion was founded by Greek colonists from the island of Vis, and it developed into a major port until the Roman period. . . . From the 9th century on, Trogir paid tribute to Croatian rulers. The diocese of Trogir was established in the 11th century (abolished in 1828; it is now part of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Split-Makarska) and in 1107 it was chartered by the Hungarian-Croatian king Coloman, gaining thus its autonomy as a town. In 1123 Trogir was conquered and almost completely demolished by the Saracens. However, Trogir recovered in a short period to experience powerful economic prosperity in the 12th and the 13th centuries. In 1242 King Béla IV found refuge there as he fled the Tatars. In the 13th and the 14th centuries, members of the Šubić family were most frequently elected dukes by the citizens of Trogir; Mladen III (1348), according to the inscription on the sepulchral slab in the Cathedral of Trogir called "the shield of the Croats", was one of the most prominent Šubićs. In Dalmatian, the city was known as Tragur. . . . On the fall of Venice in 1797, Trogir became a part of the Habsburg Empire which ruled over the city until 1918, with the exception of French occupation from 1806 to 1814. After World War I, Trogir, together with Croatia, became a part of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and subsequently the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. During this period Italian citizens, until 1918 the ruling class and almost half part of the population, were forced to leave for Italy. During World War II, Trogir was occupied by Italy and subsequently liberated in 1944. Since then it belonged to the second Yugoslavia, and from 1991 to Croatia." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trogir AIMG_4255

The clock tower

24 Jan 2012 287
Basilique-Cathédrale Sainte-Marie et Sainte-Réparate de Nice, France was built between 1650 and 1699. AIMG_2945

Clock Tower

14 Mar 2010 151
Tower near the Jantar Mantar Obervatory (1728-1732), Jaipur, India AIMG_5001