Hot sauce

109 Pins
·
4y
This item is unavailable - Etsy
Welcome to my store, we supply all kind of faux painting ceiling tiles.Faux tin Ceiling Tiles material is PVC(Vinyl).. They come in 23.75" x 23.75" (605mmx605mm) size. Feather-light, easy to install, easy to clean, stain resistant, water resistant, dust free, and easy to cut. Can be installed in the ordinary suspended ceiling.or drop in T-bar grid. or glue up with glue. The material Ceiling Tiles is Class A Fire Rated. all color made by hand.Faux tin Ceiling tiles are available in many patterns
Early Scotland
'Pictish symbols and Celtic interlace patterns on a sculptured stone at St Vigeans near Arbroath, Scotland. Probably carved in the 8th century AD. The other side of the stone has the lower part of a cross, decorated with interlace. Illustration from The Early Christian Monuments of Scotland (1903).'
National Museum of Scotland: The Hilton of Cadboll stone, carved around AD 800.
Rosemarkie: A Little Village Full Of Pictish Stones
Wherever you go, you can be sure that someone else was there hundreds or thousands of years before you. There are incredible ancient places hiding all around us
Kintore, Pictish symbol stone. View of stone as displayed in Inverurie Museum, 15 November 1995.
Kintore, Pictish symbol stone. View of stone as displayed in Inverurie Museum, 15 November 1995.
Skeith Stone
The Skeith Stone, between Kilrenny and Cellardyke. With Pictish carving, it probably dates from about the 7th century. The carving is fairly faint but easily visible when sunlit from the side (SW-ish). Skeith has been adopted as the name for the new health centre about 500 metres away.
Pictish stone, Scotland
The Hilton of Cadboll Stone is a Class II Pictish stone discovered at Hilton of Cadboll, on the Tarbat Peninsula in Easter Ross, Scotland. It is one of the most magnificent of all Pictish cross-slabs. On the seaward-facing side is a Christian cross, and on the landward facing side are secular depictions.
St Magnus Cathedral - Orkney's Light in the North
Th ornate front door of the 12th century, Viking-built St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, Orkney, Scotland.
Aberlemno I
This is what happens when the production crew lets me have the car and some time to myself. Aberlemno, Scotland, near Forfar, inland from Carnoustie. Pictish ruins right by the country highway, down the street from a grade school. This stone likely 8th century A.D. (And it was a stick, right-side drive. So there.)