20 items found relating to : Lighting
| CAFE GRILL The Café Grill on the Boat Deck is a pleasantly sunny room by day, and by night is softly illuminated by shafts of iridescent light.... |
1937 | ||||
| TITANIC CHANDELIER A light fitting from the Olympic, identical to ones fitted in the Grand Staircase of the Titanic ... |
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| NIEUW AMSTERDAM : FIRST CLASS DINING ROOM. 1938 FIRST CLASS DINING ROOM: In the Dining Room, a very satisfactory sense of balance has been achieved by the architect, Jac. F. Semey, between the blue, gold and ivory color scheme, and the lighting and mural decorations. Ornamented gold shaded M... |
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| POSTWAR 12. JUNGLE BAR. CABIN CLASS. JUNGLE BAR: One of the most delightful spots on the entire ship is the exquisitely appointed Jungle Bar. Its dark walls, sophisticated decorations and subdued lighting provide the intimate charm of your favorite rendez-vous at home. Here you will ... |
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| POSTWAR 8. FIRST CLASS DINING ROOM. DINING ROOM: Every detail of the First Class Dining Room is calculated to enhance your enjoyment of the lavish meals served aboard ship. The golden, padded ceiling, tinted mirrors and soft, diffused lighting lend an air of quiet distinction. On cruis... |
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| NIEUW AMSTERDAM : TOURIST CLASS DINING ROOM. 1938 TOURIST CLASS DINING ROOM: Located on A Deck, air conditioned and connected with the First Class Dining Room by doors, enabling both rooms to be used as one when required. Seating capacity 292. Carpeted in grey in large squares of alternating nap. Wa... |
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| NIEUW AMSTERDAM : FIRST CLASS DINING ROOM First Class Dining Room: The Dining Room on A Deck is an exquisitely delicate setting of ivory walls, pale gold ceiling, gold leaf columns, tinted mirrors, satinwood furniture, two toned blue carpet and handmade frosty Murano glass lighting fixtures.... |
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| NIEUW AMSTERDAM : GRAND HALL, 1938. The Grand Hall has been intelligently decorated in tones of gray to enhance fully the glamorous effect of exquisitely gowned women and their escorts in evening dress. It extends two decks high and measuring seventy three feet long and fifty two feet ... |
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| NIEUW AMSTERDAM : STUYVESANT CAFE, TOURIST CLASS. 1938. STUYVESANT CAFÉ AND VERANDAH: Tourist Class. Overlooks the Sports Deck; has a dance floor and a large coriander bar upholster in artificial beige leather. Ceilings lacquered in Naples yellow; walls light pale green; pillars polished gold leaf; carp... |
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| Broadway World | THE UNSINKABLE MOLLY BROWN MAKES UK PREMIERE AT LANDOR THEATER 5/27 So long Dolly! Move over, Mame! Make way for the biggest of Broadway's leading ladies, "The Unsinkable Molly Brown". The Titanic may have sunk, but she survived.Thom Southerland in association with the Landor Theatre... |
6th May 2009 | |||
| MARCONIGRAMS SENT AND RECEIVED BY CAPTAIN SMITH ON THE TITANIC Marconigram to Commander Empress of Britain, 12 April, 1912, which read: Many thanks for your kind message from all here. Smith. Marconigram: 14th April 1912, 12.55pm. Commander Baltic. Thanks for your message and good wishes. Had fine... |
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| New York Times | MISS LUCILE CARTER A BUD IN NEWPORT --- Daughter of Mrs. George Brooke of Philadelphia Greeted by Society Throng --- HER BOW AT DINNER DANCE --- Mrs. Beeckman and Mrs. Perin Fly in Hydröaeroplane with E. E. Dodge---Tennis Tourney Continues ---... |
12th August 1916 | |||
| NOTE BY FRANCES WILSON ON THE ISMAY FAMILY ARCHIVE Frances Wilson Frances Wilson, author of How to Survive the Titanic or The Sinking of J. Bruce Ismay discusses her enduring interest in the Titanic and her discovery of the Ismay family archive... |
11th August 2011 | ||||
| Newark Star | GIRL SAYS FATHER SAVED HER IN WRECK Miss Lillian Cribb Led Through Passageways on Titanic to Lifeboat --- To the rare presence of mind of her father, John H. Cribb, who lost his life when the Titanic sank, Miss Lillian M. Cribb, 17 years old, believes she owes her life. C... |
20th April 1912 | |||
| San Francisco Chronicle | NEW TITANIC EXHIBIT IN SAN FRANCISCO In telling the oft-told tale of engineering hubris and an iceberg in the night, the show's organizers and designers feed the public's sturdy appetite for Titanic lore and kitsch. They do it by merging some 300 relics with reconstructed spaces from the ship, theatrically dramatic lighting, ambient sound and period music, photomurals, video and hands-on details. The viewer's sensory pleasure is foremost throughout, right down to a freezer-cooled iceberg you can walk up to and touch. Everything here is meant to seduce and entertain -- with a pinch of education as a bonus -- and much of the show succeeds in doing just that. ... |
12th June 2006 | |||
| Galesburg Evening Mail | TELLS OF RESCUE FROM TITANIC Frank Kurun of Galesburg Tells How He Saved Himself and Daughter WAS IN A BOAT FIRST PICKED UP Jumped from Lower Deck Into Life Boat As It Was Being Lowered His Brother Drowned Frank Kurun,... |
23rd April 1912 | |||
| Cape Cod Times | SUBMERSIBLE ALVIN AWAITS MAJOR OVERHAUL Eventually, the submersible used to locate a missing hydrogen bomb and first view the Titanic will take scientists deeper into the ocean's impenetrable abyss than humans have ever gone. But not without sinking a larger-than-anticipated chunk of money into this famed submarine.... |
15th September 2009 | |||
| Worcester Telegram | ASPLUND FUND TOTALS $1031.25, BUT BODY OF VICTIM OF TITANIC DISASTER FAILS TO REACH WORCESTER The benefit fund for Mrs. Charles Asplund and her two children saved from the titanic, while her husband and three sons went to their deaths, yesterday passed the $1000 mark. The total amount subscribed last night was $1031.25, and tha... |
4th May 1912 | |||
| Titanic Research | DETERIORATION OF THE RMS TITANIC Stephanie Clements The RMS. Titanic has laid 2.5 miles below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean since her sinking, on her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York on April 14, 1912. Many questions were raised on the state of the vessel condition and how sh... |
11th January 2008 | |||
| Greensburg Herald Tribune | YOUNG GREENSBURG WOMAN WAS PASSENGER ON ILL-FATED SHIP "Oh, I feel bad, ver' bad, los' money, los' friend. When I stand up I see ship come again, when I shut my eyes. I see people go down, down, down--Oh ver' bad time." And, with the remembrance of it, Mrs. Sophie Abraham, 20 years old, shuddered and bur... |
22nd April 1912 | |||