Furnace 

134 creative works found

  • Wagon Wheel, Hopewell Furnace, PA

  • Rock wall of a furnace at Hopewell Furnace, PA

  • Densly packed with stuff in a small room, this is a blacksmith shop.

  • One of our local pubs (The Furnace) in Barnsley which overlooks a pond… lovely reflections in this night shot! Click to see some of my other categories- – Autumn Collection / – Flowers / - Wildlife / - Christmas & Other Cards / - Clothing

  • Furnace dials at Sloss Furnace, Birmingham Alabama.

  • This is Rockley Blast Furnace, well what is left of it! What survives is the stack with an inner lining of heat resisting sandstone blocks, but the hearth itself and most of the dressed stone outer facings have gone. To the south side is the charging bank which was linked to the furnace top by a bridge. This also used to be a place as a child used to go and hide and seek!, last weekend brought back some great memories!

  • This is Rockley blast furnace, near Birdwell, South Yorkshire. It stands in woods only a couple of miles away from where I live. I didn’t know about it until ‘Dave Warren’ a friend and neighbour put a photograph on last week. Thanks Dave, had a good time exploring!. / The furnace was built between 1698 and 1704 to smelt the local iron ore. To the side is the charging bank which was linked to the furnace top by a bridge which is no longer there.

  • Ok Im over the blood thing for a while now. Back to fairies!

  • BETTER VIEWED LARGER A monument to Lithgow’s industrial history. It was here that the first iron and the first steel in Australia were cast. William Sandford established the blast furnace in 1886 and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was moved to Port Kembla. The site has now been developed as a park around the remains of the pump house and the foundations of the furnace In order to meet the obligations of his contract, Sandford built a new blast furnace with a capacity of 1,000 tons per week the funds for which were secured through a significant bank overdraft (Brown 1989, p.74). The bank was to shortly foreclose on Sandford’s loan, with the operations then passing to G & C Hoskins. After George and Cecil Hoskins took over the Steel Works in 1908 the business began to thrive. In an attempt to make the local steel industry more viable, the Hoskins Brothers persuaded the government to pay a bounty for Australian produced steel. The Hoskins Brothers moved their operations from Rhodes in Sydney to Lithgow and began to make significant advancements. Lithgow was to become renown for its steel production, with thousands of tons of steel being produced for the Trans-Australia Railway. In the first year of production, the Steel Works treated 51,000 tons of ore and employed 632 people (Lithgow Public School 1947). By 1926 the steel furnaces had turned out 178,000 tons of ore, resulting in 105,000 tons of pig iron (Lithgow Public School 1947). Equipment:Nikon D300 Sigma 10-20mm lens / Technique: 5 Bracketted Images processed through Photomatix Pro /

  • BEST VIEWED LARGER This shot taken in LIthgow’s Blast Furnace Park around sunset Blast Furnace Park is a monument to Lithgow’s industrial history. It was here that the first iron and steel were cast in Australia. William Sandford / established the blast furnace in 1886 and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was move to Port Kembla. The site has now been developed as a park around the remains of the pump house and the furnace foundations. There is a pleasant walk around Lake / Pillans Wetland is adjacent to the park Technique: HDR = 5 bracketted Images = Photomatix / Equipment: NIkon D300 Sigma 10-20mm lens

  • BEST VIEWED LARGER This shot taken in LIthgow’s Blast Furnace Park around sunset Blast Furnace Park is a monument to Lithgow’s industrial history. It was here that the first iron and steel were cast in Australia. William Sandford / established the blast furnace in 1886 and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was move to Port Kembla. The site has now been developed as a park around the remains of the pump house and the furnace foundations. There is a pleasant walk around Lake / Pillans Wetland is adjacent to the park Technique: HDR = 5 bracketted Images = Photomatix / Equipment: NIkon D300 Sigma 10-20mm lens

  • Another Antelope Canyon. / Canon 40d / 17-40L / / / /

  • BEST VIEWED LARGER This shot taken in LIthgow’s Blast Furnace Park around sunset, the golden glow lights the windows , a bit lonely there after the sun goes down Blast Furnace Park is a monument to Lithgow’s industrial history. It was here that the first iron and steel were cast in Australia. William Sandford / established the blast furnace in 1886 and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was move to Port Kembla. The site has now been developed as a park around the remains of the pump house and the furnace foundations. There is a pleasant walk around Lake / Pillans Wetland is adjacent to the park Technique: HDR = 5 bracketted Images = Photomatix / Equipment: NIkon D300 Sigma 10-20mm lens

  • Lithgow Blast Furnace (just west of the Blue Mountains, NSW, Australia) ... a site which is now the only remaining relic of Australia’s iron-making history. Walls are barely standing – these structures are a sad shell of what they were. The Furnace was established in 1886 by William Sandford, and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was moved to Port Kembla on the South Coast. Geek info: Handheld, shutter priority, f/8, ISO 160, WB cloudy, Metering centre weighted. Photomatix HDR from a single jpeg (1/3 EV) and tweaked in CS3. Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM

  • Black and white version … / Lithgow Blast Furnace (just west of the Blue Mountains, NSW, Australia) ... a site which is now the only remaining relic of Australia’s iron-making history. Walls are barely standing – these structures are a sad shell of what they were. The Furnace was established in 1886 by William Sandford, and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was moved to Port Kembla on the South Coast. Geek info: Handheld, shutter priority, f/8, ISO 160, WB cloudy, Metering centre weighted. Photomatix HDR from a single jpeg (1/3 EV) and tweaked in CS3. Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM

  • this is an old blast furnace,,,,, in one of the mines in Ballarat Australia,,, I thought it was the perfect shot to create this image with,,,,,,,,, I made it bw, and then used a radius feature in picnik to give the illusion of the firey fingers reaching out….. / Kodak C3240 Featured in Friends of Bangor and North Down Camera Club May 10/09

  • Abstract series

  • An old train bridge now turned into “Rails to Trails” hiking trail for the public. Located a few feet from Eliza Furnace. Vintondale, Pennsylvania Canon G9 N 40 48427 / W 78.92244

  • Another shot from the Lithgow Blast Furnace (just west of the Blue Mountains, NSW, Australia) ... a site which is now the only remaining relic of Australia’s iron-making history. Walls are barely standing – these structures are a sad shell of what they were. The Furnace was established in 1886 by William Sandford, and it continued production until 1928 when the entire industry was moved to Port Kembla on the South Coast. Landscapes Trees Cards EOD Rusty Flowers Architecture Macro CatchAll DM

  • A preview of what’s in store for Wave Four of the Game of Kings collaborative project, to be released on Monday, 17 August. Artwork: Simon Sherry

  • Shot on the Gold Coast, Australia. For Jordan – kissy kissy. www.timcrawshaw.com

  • abandoned factory Asheville, NC. USA / Olympus E-510. Zuiko 28mm. companion piece to homeless shelter

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