Monday, May 12, 2014

birds-eye-view-aerial-photography-8 30 Incredible Views you’d see if you were a bird

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30 Incredible Views you’d see if you were a bird.. or from a airplane, Heli, Airglider etc.. but hey it just sounds cooler..
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1. Barcelona  |  Image credits: Aldas Kirvaitis
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2. Central Park, New York City   |   Image credits: Sergey Semenov
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3. Dubai Islands  |  image credits: unknown
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4. Maze at Longleat, England   |   Image credits: archive.4plebs.org
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5. Mexico City   |   Image credits: Pablo Lopez Luz
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6. Venice   |   Image credits: Yann Arthus Bertrand
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7. Amsterdam, The Netherlands  |   Image credits: Cris Toala Olicares
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8. Niagara Falls, Canada   |   Image credits: thezooom.com
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9. Namib Desert, Namibia   |   Image credits: SysaWorld Roberto Moiola
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10. Chicago Skyline, U.S.A   |   Image credits:  Robert Elves
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11. Tulip Fields, The Netherlands   |    Image credits: Normann Szkop
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12. Bern, Switzerland   |   Image credits: imgur.com
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13. Dubrovnik, Croatia   |   Image credits: Michaelphillipr
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14. Paris, France   |   Image credits: imgur.com
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15. Meskendir Valley, Turkey   |   Image credits: Beng Lieu Song
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16. Shanghai, China   |   Image credits: Mike Hedge

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17. Capetown, South Africa   |   Image credits: imgur.com
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18. Moscow, Russia   |   Image credits: imgur.com
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19. Athens, Greece   |   Image credits: imgur.com
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20. Vancouver, Canada   |    Image credits: Evan Leeson
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21. Male, Maldives   |    Image credits:  Mohamed Abdulla Shafeeg
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22. Seattle, U.S.A   |    Image credits: thatcherphotography.com
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23. Giza Pyramids, Egypt   |   Image credits: satimagingcorp.com
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24. Bac Son Valley, Vietnam   |   Image credits: Hai Thinh
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25. Marina Bay, Dubai   |   Image credits: airpano.com
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26. Rio de Janeiro   |    Image credits: Antonello
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27. Terraced Rice Fields, China   |   Image credits: Thierry Bornier
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28. Vatican City   |    Image credits: Randy P
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29. Lake in Pomerania, Poland   |   Image credits: Kacper Kowalski
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30. San Francisco, U.S.A   |   Image Credits: Flickr csaulit

Sunday, May 11, 2014

How to Organize a Kitchen

10 Tips and Ideas

Learning how to organize a kitchen not only ensures that your kitchen is consistently neat and tidy, but also helps to streamline kitchen activities. Regardless of whether you have just moved into a new house or want to improve the functionality of your current kitchen, we believe these tips will help.
One of the most popular ways to organize a kitchen is to start with a good drawer divider system.
1. Dispose of Clutter: Donate or discard anything that you are no longer using in the kitchen. You can hand it down to a relative, donate it to charity, or sell it on eBay or at a yard sale. While some of the cookware in your kitchen may have some sort of sentimental value to you, be sure to weigh how much you use it versus how much space it consumes. For example, when did you last use the cookie press? Is the melon baller gathering dust? Do you use all the gizmos in your kitchen? Getting rid of kitchenware that you no longer use will create space for the items you really use. If you want great de-cluttering ideas and inspiration, read Clutter's Last Stand by Don Aslett.

2. Go Shopping: If there is broken kitchenware, replace it with cookware that is functioning. For example, if the fry pan keeps scorching your delicate dishes, replace it with a non-stick fry pan. If you do not have the money to replace the kitchenware, include it in your birthday or anniversary request list.

3. Sort Smarter: Keep utensils that are frequently used in an area that can easily be reached. For instance, you can have a cupboard for keeping utensils that are rarely used and shelves for keeping cookware that is frequently utilized. Then again, if you lack enough room in your kitchen to build shelves and cabinets, rarely used items can be kept in an protective container in the garage.
A pull-out spice rack is a great way to keep your spices organized in one place.
A pull-out spice rack is a great way to keep your spices organized in one place.
4. Create Work Zones: Consider various centers of activities and keep related cookware close to one another. If you happen to be remodeling, consider building a pantry near the refrigerator to consolidate your food zones, adding a preparation area where meals are prepared before cooking, and a cooking area where the stove is to be placed with appropriate spices and utensils close by. Other zones to consider are a cleaning and waste disposal area as well as a baking and serving area. Creating these activity zones will streamline operations in your kitchen. Check out Blum Dynamic Space for more suggestions on ideal work zones, which are introduced in the video below:
Blum DYNAMIC SPACE - Kitchen Zone Planning
Beyond the Work Triangle: After studying the workflow of kitchen users worldwide, Blum has developed a planning guide called DYNAMIC SPACE which aims to make kitchen tasks more comfortable, less time-consuming, and more ergonomic. The core of their solution begins with planning the kitchen in five zones: Consumables, Non-Consumables, Cleaning, Preparation, and Cooking.

5. Clear the Countertops: The kitchen counter is your main workspace. Do not forget to clean it in addition to removing clutter from it. How often do you use the appliances currently taking up space on the countertop? Is the mixer, toaster oven, rice cooker, or juicer collecting dust? If you any of your countertop appliances infrequently, consider storing them in a nearby cabinet instead to be pulled out when needed.
Save counter space by storing your stand mixer in a base cabinet. This one is built onto a mechanized cabinet lift for frequent access.
Save counter space by storing your stand mixer in a base cabinet. This one is built onto a mechanized cabinet lift for frequent access.
6. Organize Shopping Lists: For couples and families, keeping a consistent place for a shopping list is very helpful, so that anyone can mark the things that you do not have in your kitchen. Also, maintaining a separate list of supplies you like to store your kitchen will help you in ensuring that your kitchen is always stocked. Maintaining this supply list aids you in buying what is necessary for your kitchen, thus avoiding impulse buying.

7. Setup a Workstation: Do you use your kitchen when sending mail or helping your kids with homework? Do you find yourself reading the morning newspaper in the kitchen? If you find yourself using the kitchen for other activities besides cooking, make sure that there is a tidy location within your kitchen where you can sit and read a book or help your child with their homework. See this gallery of Kitchen Desks on Pinterest for more inspiration.
Kitchen Desk
An increasing number of families now use the kitchen for everyday tasks, from checking email to doing homework. If you plan to have a desk in your kitchen, be sure to keep it tidy. See more pictures of this kitchen.
8. Get a Tune Up: Your kitchen will not be at its optimum if there are broken or damaged components, such as leaking faucets or partially clogged drains. If something is broken in your kitchen, make a point of replacing or fixing it as soon as possible.

9. Sort by Frequency of Use: Ideally, an efficient kitchen basically boils down to having what you need at your fingertips. If there are items that you use on a frequent basis, you can keep them close to the area where they are most used, while lesser-used items should be placed in harder-to-reach areas.

10. Keep Tidy Habits: Finally, do not forget to clean the kitchen as you work. Once you are through with a pan, have it cleaned and stored away. This is the most productive habit to maintain. Cleaning as you work ensures that clutter does not pile up to unmanageable sizes in the kitchen.

Read more: http://www.kitchen-design-ideas.org/how-to-organize-a-kitchen.html#ixzz31TMXhx5f
http://www.kitchen-design-ideas.org/how-to-organize-a-kitchen.html

Monday, April 28, 2014

How To Make A Fabulous Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture!


DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture
Important: Before doing any electrical work, make sure the power is OFF.  Use a voltage tester to make sure no wires are live.  I don’t want to hear about any of you guys electrocuting yourselves and then blaming me, alright?  Good?  Moving on…



First, decide what you want your light fixture to look like.  I based mine on the track lighting options I was considering for the kitchen, since I knew a long, narrow shape would work best.  I mocked it up in Photoshop Elements for reference, at around 50” in length:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Plan

If you can imagine a shape composed of straight lines, you can probably create it!  It helps to know a few basic plumbing pipe piece shapes and names, so you know what you have to work with.  Also so you can keep a straight face as you’re rummaging through poorly organized bins and asking the plumbing department workers for the correct size nipples.

plumbing pipe threaded nipples

plumbing pipe threaded nipples

Threaded Nipples.  Yes, that’s what they’re called.  Snicker and then move on. These come in various lengths from miniscule 1” pieces to about a foot long. The perfect building blocks for our light fixture as they are pre-threaded on both ends.

plumbing pipe elbows, tees, floor flange

Elbows, Tees, Flanges.  These pieces are all connector pieces – they screw onto the threaded ends of nipples and let you form bends and t-shapes.  The floor flange is a perfect top piece for securing your light fixture to the ceiling (more on that later).

I gathered the components for my light fixture over the course of several trips to Home Depot, basically brainstorming as I went.  Lucky for you, I’ve created an inventory/shopping list below, as well as a handy budget breakdown!

For starters, I decided to use 1/2” black steel pipe.  I chose the smallest diameter available to make the light fixture as light as possible.  I also loved the industrial color of the black steel.

(Also, it makes me think of THIS! Oops, wait, that’s blue steel…)

Shopping List:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Parts

1. Six light fixture sockets.  I can’t seem to find the exact ones I used on the Home Depot website, but this socket from Lowes is the same kind. This is the kind of socket with two screws – a silver screw for the neutral wire, and a gold screw for the hot wire. $3.24 each, $19.44 total.

2. One 1/2” floor flange. I could only find this part in a galvanized finish, so I spray-painted it to match… More on that momentarily! Approximately $6.

3. Six PVC Male 1” by 3/4” Coupling Adapters. Again, this piece was spray-painted to match, since I could only find the size and shape I needed in white PVC pipe.  I chose to go with PVC pipe after searching high and low for a part that the light socket could sit up inside (see detail photos below).  It doesn’t actually screw together with the other metal parts, but I was able to push the two pieces together, and then hold them taught with the wiring.  Hey - it works! $1.26 each, $7.56 total.

4. Two 1/2” Black Steel Elbows. To create the arms hanging down on the left and right sides of the light fixture.  $1.46 each, $2.92 total.

5. Six 1/2” x 2” Nipples.  For the six short arms that hang down and connect to the light sockets.  $1.24 each, $7.44 total.

6. Four 1/2” x 8” Nipples. To create the length of the light fixture.  $2.76 each, $11.04 total.

7. Three 1/2” x 3” Nipples. One to hang down from the ceiling, the other to create the split portion in the center of the light fixture.  $1.35 each, $4.05 total.

8. Five 1/2” Tees. To hold the arms of the light fixture.  $1.86 each, $9.30 total.

You will also need some thin wire (I used 14 stranded, but even thinner would have been helpful) in two different colors – the electrician working at Home Depot gave me white and pink because I am a girl. #Sexism. 50 feet was WAY TOO MUCH wire, but I didn’t feel like trying to do exact math and then possibly coming up short on wire.  The wire total was about $22, but I maybe used $8 worth of it… I guess I’ll just have to make some more light fixtures!

14 Strand Wire

And this is the spray paint I used: Rust-Oleum Bright Coat Metallic Finish Dark Bronze.  It was a near perfect match for the black steel pipe:

rustoleum bright coat metallic finish dark bronze

spray painted parts

Here are the parts all laid out so you can see how this light fixture comes together:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Parts

And assembled (and wired):

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Assembled

I do not have any pictures of the wiring process.  I followed these directions, so I’m going to point you there instead of trying to go into full detail here.  Basically, you need to wire the light fixture while you are assembling it.  I started with the farthest arms and worked my way inward, screwing the pipes together as I went. 

Closeup photos.  You can see how the light socket fits up inside the PVC adapter:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture

String a length of white wire and pink wire [or black, or whatever color your “hot” wire is] through all the straight pieces along one arm, down the elbow, through the nipple and the coupling adapter, and wire the light socket according to the wiring instructions (careful to attach the neutral wire to the silver screw, and the hot wire to the gold screw).  To be extra safe, I wrapped the top of my socket with electrical tape to make sure no wires would make contact with any part of the light fixture.

Behold my glorious Photoshopped illustration below:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Wiring

Repeat for each arm of the light fixture:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Wiring

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture Wiring

By the time you are finished, you will have six neutral wires and six hot wires coming out the top.

Twist together all the pink/black wires, and then twist together all the white wires.  This way you can connect all the neutral wires to the one white wire in the ceiling junction box, and then all the hot wires to the one black wire in the ceiling junction box, using a plastic wire nut for each connection.  (Again, check out these instructions for visuals!)

Actually hanging the light fixture was beyond my expertise, so I called in my dad to do the honors.  As such, I do not have advice besides: have someone who knows how to do these things do them for you.  If you are the one who knows how to do this, then you’re golden.  (I am beyond impressed!)

To me, electricity is akin to black magic, and I prefer not to dabble in something I of which I know so little…

Here is a closeup shot so you can see how we hung the light fixture:

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture

That is a 7” wooden plaque from Michael’s ($1.99) painted with white ceiling paint and with a 3/4” thick hole drilled through the center. 

[At this point, double check that the power is off.  I know you already did, but do it again anyway.]

We first mounted the wooden plaque to the junction box, then pulled the wires through the center hole. We attached the wires with wire nuts and then shoved them back up into the junction box through the hole in the center of the plaque.  Then we screwed the metal floor flange onto the wooden plaque.

Stepped down, flipped the switch.

DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture

If all your connections are good, this is what you’ll see! 

Given the conductivity of metal, we used the voltage tester to double check that the pipe did not have live electricity flowing through it.  Sigh of relief.  No one’s getting electrocuted changing a light bulb around these parts!

Now, at this point, your arms will be tired from holding the light fixture up to make the electrical connections, but your heart will be warmed and your eyes will be blinded by the supernova of incandescent delight happening above your head.  God bless those 60-watt energy hogs. 

(Would Edison bulbs look fantastic in an industrial light fixture such as this?  Yes, indeed they would.  But goodness knows I am much too cheap to spend that much on a single light bulb. So I settled for clear round bulbs, and I love them just as much. $13 for six.)

Speaking of which, are you ready for this budget breakdown???

Plumbing pipe parts and fittings: $48.31
Light Bulb Sockets: $19.44  (You could find a cheaper source for these on the Internet, fyi.)
Spray Paint: $5
Wire: $22 (If you already have this, awesome.  Or if you can bum some from someone who has extra…  Like me… Even better!)
Wooden Plaque: $2
TOTAL: $97.

Not counting the light-bulbs.  Because light bulbs aren’t sexy.  And I like to think that I kept this project under $100.

NOT BAD for totally rad, industrial, modern, hand-made awesomeness!

How To Make A DIY Plumbing Pipe Light Fixture!


So what are you waiting for?  Get thee to Home Depot in throngs and greatly perplex them as to why their plumbing department is full of crazy-eyed people searching high and low for the right-sized nipples!  (What? It’s a plumbing term.  I am simply trying to be technically correct!)



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