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  • Tricity Bendix supercool doors.
  • Tricity Bendix supercool doors.
  • Left, an "iron maiden" with its doors secured; middle, a blindfolded prisoner is forced to kneel down before the "iron maiden" in a dungeon; right, an "iron maiden" with its doors open. Etching.
  • Death knocks at the doors of both the poor and the rich. Pen and ink drawing.
  • Barber-surgeons' Hall, Monkwell Street, London: the entrance to the hall, with elaborate carving above the doors. Engraving, 1816.
  • Royal College of Physicians: the courtyard, with lettering identifying the various doors. Engraving by D. Loggan after himself, 1677.
  • Barber-surgeons' Hall, Monkwell Street, London: the entrance to the hall, with elaborate heraldic carving above the doors. Engraving after T. H. Shepherd, 1830.
  • Harpies try to keep open the doors of the temple of Janus, but they are clubbed by Hercules. Mezzotint by A. Blooteling after G. Lairesse.
  • Harpies try to keep open the doors of the temple of Janus, but they are clubbed by Hercules. Coloured mezzotint by A. Blooteling after G. de Lairesse.
  • Annual meeting at St. James' Banqueting Room, Regent Street, London, W. (ten doors above Swan and Edgar's) on Thursday, April 28th, at 3 p.m. ...
  • A door with six panels bearing vignettes of further doors representing an advertisement for women with AIDS by the AIDS Council of New South Wales. Colour lithograph by Dreadnaught and Jan Fieldsend.
  • The Modern Living Colossus, or Wonderful Giant, is to be seen at Mr. Squire's, peruke maker, facing the Mews-Walk, within two doors of the Panopticon, Charing Cross ...
  • No longer behind closed doors - in your face and proud to be gay : after years of confusion and unhappiness, I'm finally able to accept myself / The Naz Project London ; photography by: Parminder Sekhon.
  • Fishmongers' Hall, Thames Street, London: the entrance to the hall, with elaborate allegorical carving above the doors, two fashionable ladies, a scholar and a coal-heaver in the street. Engraving by J. Greig after T. H. Shepherd, 1830.
  • Nepal; agriculture in the Khumbu, 1986. As N0022569C, different aspect. Pangboche (altitude 4200 metres), a view of the village with its walled, terraced fields. The houses are built with their backs to the mountain. Only the fronts have windows and doors.
  • Nepal; town life in the Khumbu, 1986. Namche Bazar (altitude 3446 metres), a bustling and prosperous market town, is the largest Sherpa settlement in the Khumbu. Many of its Tibetan-style houses devote the ground floor to animal shelters while the family lives upstairs. Most have windows and doors at the front of the building only, the back being built into the side of the mountain. Firewood is stacked against walls, and small terraced fields grow staples (potatoes, barley, wheat). At left is a Buddhist shrine or stupa, on each side of which is painted the eyes of the Buddha. Prayer flags are strung out from its summit.
  • Cattle in in-door housing
  • Arab pharmacy, view of front door
  • Radiograph: platinum plate attached to a door
  • Hôtel-Dieu, Beaune: front door. Photograph, 19--.
  • Good stable box: door open outwards, etc
  • Chinese/Japanese Pulse Image chart: Removing Door pulse
  • Architecture: various highly wrought designs for door furniture. Engraving.
  • Door open on Vault in graveyard at Udny, Aberdeenshire.
  • Hôtel-Dieu, Beaune: door between two turrets. Photograph, 19--.
  • Photographs: the Mockler collection of Jennerianna: view towards door.
  • Door closed on Vault in graveyard at Udny, Aberdeenshire.
  • Architecture: two designs for door knockers. Wood engraving, 1849.
  • A dog (Brutus) hiding behind a door in a barn while another dog sits outside the door. Etching by T. Landseer, 1824, after E. Landseer.
  • A man hides behind one door as the young woman he has been with moves to greet a newly-arrived couple, appearing through another door. Stipple engraving, 1786.