Tag: joanne ferreira
Beautiful Texture
Beautiful Historic Architecture
Trolling around Queen Anne Hill this week
inspires me to share an example of beautiful reuse.
Old Queen Anne High School, designed by James Stephen
in 1899, is a Neo-classical building that sits high atop
Queen Anne Hill in Seattle. Originally noted for its
spacious corridors, ample exits, and abundant light
and fresh air it was considered “modern” when it
was constructed. Today is houses, in all its
Neo-classical glory, high-end condominiums.
An excellent example of the adaptive reuse of
historic buildings.

Beautiful Nature
Beautiful Dog Friends
Beautiful Dog Friend
Beautiful Nature
Random moments of natural beauty captured
by an iPhone.

Wet leaves, love the texture and color

I usually can’t achieve this kind of detail with an
iPhone, the lighting must have been perfect to
capture the water droplets

The bright yellow and shadows caught my attention

Surprised to see hydrangeas in late fall.
Photo taken at twighlight
Beautiful Orange
History of Chrome orange:
Chromium was the chameleon-like fruit of a Siberian mineral, called crocoite and discovered in the eighteenth century. The mineral is deep orange, a natural form of lead chromate. It was analysed in the late 1790s by the eminent French chemist Nicolas Louis Vauquelin, who identified the new element chromium as the source of the color. Vauquelin studied the compounds of chromium, and found that he could make bright yellow and rich orange versions of lead chromate, both of which he proposed as potential pigments. Chrome orange became the first pure orange pigment since the medieval use of realgar, a highly toxic compound of arsenic. The chromium colors did not become widespread, however, until the discovery of chromium-containing mineral deposits in France, USA and Britain. By replacing the lead in chrome yellow with other metals, such as zinc and strontium, the color could be tuned to paler or more acidic hues, such as ‘lemon yellow’. Chrome orange was introduced as a pigment in 1809. The world production of chrome orange ceased few years ago.
Beautiful Mural Art
Beautiful Arches
Beautiful Lighthouse

Mukilteo Lighthouse, Mukilteo, WA
1906, Architect Carl Leick
The lighthouse was built and constructed of fir wood
at a cost of $27,000. a cost of $27,000.























