File:Stained glass windows inside Bishop's Castle, a most eclectic art installation 9,000 feet high in the mountains of southern Colorado, up a winding road from San Isabel in San Isabel National Forest LCCN2015632546.tif
Original file (6,175 × 3,900 pixels, file size: 137.84 MB, MIME type: image/tiff)
Captions
Summary
editDescriptionStained glass windows inside Bishop's Castle, a most eclectic art installation 9,000 feet high in the mountains of southern Colorado, up a winding road from San Isabel in San Isabel National Forest LCCN2015632546.tif |
English: Title: Stained glass windows inside Bishop's Castle, a most eclectic art installation 9,000 feet high in the mountains of southern Colorado, up a winding road from San Isabel in San Isabel National Forest
Physical description: 1 photograph : digital, tiff file, color. Notes: Purchase; Carol M. Highsmith Photography, Inc.; 2015; (DLC/PP-2015:068).; Forms part of: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive.; Credit line: Gates Frontiers Fund Colorado Collection within the Carol M. Highsmith Archive, Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.; Title, date and keywords based on information provided by the photographer.; The creation of Jim and Phoebe Bishop, though the heavy lifting was all Jim's, began in the late 1970s as a simple mountain cabin and grew like topsy as whimsical inspirations came to the couple. Jim does everything: he worked with his father in the family's Bishop Ornamental Iron shop, welding and scroll bending and learning how things fit together. He has hauled, milled, hoisted all of the materials and handled each and every stone in the castle on average of SIX TIMES to create Bishop's Castle. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Date | Taken on 26 May 2015, 12:57 (according to Exif data) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Source |
Library of Congress
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Author |
creator QS:P170,Q5044454 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
No known restrictions on publication.
|
Camera location | 38° 03′ 40.96″ N, 105° 05′ 39.41″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 38.061377; -105.094280 |
---|
Licensing
editPublic domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
This work is from the Carol M. Highsmith Archive collection at the Library of Congress. According to the library, there are no known copyright restrictions on the use of this work. Carol M. Highsmith has stipulated that her photographs are in the public domain. Photographs of sculpture or other works of art may be restricted by the copyright of the artist; see Commons:FOP US#Artworks and sculptures for more information. |
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 02:51, 12 September 2016 | 6,175 × 3,900 (137.84 MB) | Fæ (talk | contribs) | LOC 2015632546, Carol M. Highsmith collection. P795.14185 TIFF (137.8mb) |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage on Commons
There are no pages that use this file.
Metadata
This file contains additional information such as Exif metadata which may have been added by the digital camera, scanner, or software program used to create or digitize it. If the file has been modified from its original state, some details such as the timestamp may not fully reflect those of the original file. The timestamp is only as accurate as the clock in the camera, and it may be completely wrong.
Image title | Stained-glass windows inside Bishop's Castle, a most eclectic art installation 9,000 feet high in the mountains of southern Colorado, up a winding road from San Isabel in San Isabel National Forest. (Its mailing address is Rye, farther away.) The creation of Jim and Phoebe Bishop, it began in the late 1970s as a simple mountain cabin and grew like topsy as whimsical inspirations came to the couple. Writes Jim Bishop about himself on the castle Web site: "He had apprenticed and then mastered with his father in the family's Bishop Ornamental Iron shop, welding and scroll bending and learning how things fit together for most of his life. Jim did everything -- hauling rock from the state highway ditches, felling timber and then milling it into lumber, building railroad ties into forms for his arches, (he's used the same form over and over), building scaffolding as he went. He hand dug holes up to 12 feet deep for the foundations, mixed all his own mortar, carried it, usually up, to wherever he was working, created and rigged complex systems of pulleys and come-alongs to hoist such things as tree trunks for the floor supports, and stone by stone his dreams were being made manifest. Jim handles each and every stone in the castle on average of SIX TIMES!!! before it rests in its final configuration in this massive re-organizing of the scattered granite in the Rocky Mountains into the form of the Bishop Castle." |
---|---|
Camera manufacturer | NIKON CORPORATION |
Camera model | NIKON D810 |
Author | Carol M. Highsmith |
Exposure time | 1/50 sec (0.02) |
F-number | f/10 |
ISO speed rating | 400 |
Date and time of data generation | 12:57, 26 May 2015 |
Lens focal length | 24 mm |
Latitude | 38° 3′ 40.96″ N |
Longitude | 105° 5′ 39.41″ W |
Altitude | 2,768 meters above sea level |
Width | 6,175 px |
Height | 3,900 px |
Bits per component |
|
Compression scheme | Uncompressed |
Pixel composition | RGB |
Image data location | 31,874 |
Orientation | Normal |
Number of components | 3 |
Number of rows per strip | 3,900 |
Bytes per compressed strip | 144,495,000 |
Horizontal resolution | 300 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 300 dpi |
Data arrangement | chunky format |
Software used | NIKON D810 Ver.1.02 |
File change date and time | 21:44, 29 May 2015 |
Exposure Program | Manual |
Exif version | 2.21 |
Date and time of digitizing | 12:57, 26 May 2015 |
APEX shutter speed | 5.643856 |
APEX aperture | 6.643856 |
APEX exposure bias | 0.33333333333333 |
Maximum land aperture | 3 APEX (f/2.83) |
Metering mode | Pattern |
Light source | Unknown |
Flash | Flash did not fire, compulsory flash suppression |
DateTimeOriginal subseconds | 74 |
Color space | Uncalibrated |
Focal plane X resolution | 2,048.4022216797 |
Focal plane Y resolution | 2,048.4022216797 |
Focal plane resolution unit | 3 |
Sensing method | One-chip color area sensor |
File source | Digital still camera |
Scene type | A directly photographed image |
Custom image processing | Normal process |
Exposure mode | Manual exposure |
White balance | Auto white balance |
Digital zoom ratio | 1 |
Focal length in 35 mm film | 24 mm |
Scene capture type | Standard |
Scene control | Low gain up |
Contrast | Normal |
Saturation | Normal |
Sharpness | Normal |
Subject distance range | Unknown |
GPS time (atomic clock) | 18:57 |
Satellites used for measurement | 07 |
Geodetic survey data used | WGS84 |
GPS date | 26 May 2015 |
GPS tag version | 0.0.3.2 |