Facade Window Detail

Uploaded By

Tiny GaryParks

Featured Theater

Street-scape, night

Fox Oakland Theater

Oakland, CA

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Photo Info

Taken on: January 2, 2009

Uploaded on: July 17, 2011

Exposure: 1/320 sec, f/2.8, ISO 50

Camera: OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. C170,D425

Software: Version 1.0

Size: 831.7 KB

Views: 1,168

Full EXIF: View all

Scene capture type: 3

Exposure bias value: 0

Software: Version 1.0

Flash: 16

Custom rendered: 0

Model: C170,D425

ISO speed ratings: 50

Max aperture value: 3

Gain control: 0

Date time: Fri Jan 02 13:42:54 -0800 2009

Image description: OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Make: OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP.

Exposure mode: 0

Compressed bits per pixel: 2

Contrast: 0

Color space: 1

Saturation: 0

White balance: 0

Exposure time: 1/320

User comment:

X resolution: 72

Metering mode: 5

Pixel X dimension: 2288

Sharpness: 0

F number: 14/5

Digital zoom ratio: 0

Resolution unit: 2

Y resolution: 72

Pixel Y dimension: 1712

Date time original: Fri Jan 02 13:42:54 -0800 2009

Light source: 0

YCbCr positioning: 2

Exposure program: 5

Focal length: 61/10

Date time digitized: Fri Jan 02 13:42:54 -0800 2009

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Facade Window Detail

Detail of the types of glass used in the facade window over the marquee. This window was a replica, based on photographs. It had been replaced by a wall of glass blocks in the late 1940s when the tall ticket lobby was floored-in to join the two office wings. Hammered lavender glass, hammered amber glass, and glue-chipped beveled glass pieces were utilized in the creation of this replica window. Whereas it once provided filtered natural light to the ticket lobby’s soaring ceiling and the Maynard Dixon mural over the original entrance doors, today it provides that filtered light to two levels of hallways connecting classrooms of the school which now uses the upper levels of the Fox Oakland Office Building. The aforementioned mural (on canvas) had been hidden by a wall in the 40s remodel, but was discovered in either 1984 or ‘85, peeled from the wall during the time the Charles Dickens Christmas Faire was using the theater, and stolen. According to an individual once associated with the Faire, the pilfered mural was somehow used as part of a cocaine deal.

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