File:Emory Leyden Ford House (Hellenic Museum of Michigan), Midtown Detroit - 20201215.jpg
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[edit]DescriptionEmory Leyden Ford House (Hellenic Museum of Michigan), Midtown Detroit - 20201215.jpg |
English: The Hellenic Museum of Michigan, 67 East Kirby Street, Detroit, Michigan, December 2020. Designed by architect John Scott, there are many elements of the building's design that point the way forward toward the Tudor Revivalism that would come into vogue within the next decades, evoked by the prominent Gibbs surrounds that frame the windows, the steeply-pitched side-gabled roof, and particularly by the entrance, in which a bluntly pointed arch frames a heavy wooden door. The prominent Dutch gable crowning said entrance, however - along with the Classical motifs on the reliefs carved into the frieze above the entrance - place the ultimate style of the architecture firmly into the Flemish Renaissance Revival sphere. Emory Leyden Ford (1876-1942) made his fortune in the chemical industry, specifically as president of the Michigan Alkali Company and the J. B. Ford Chemical Company as well as an executive of a number of different firms in a variety of fields. He is unrelated to the Ford family of automotive fame. Ford lived in the house from its construction in 1906 until the completion of his now-demolished English Renaissance-style mansion in Grosse Pointe ten years later. Subsequent owners include Robert Pauli Scherer (1906-1960), inventor and producer of a rotary die encapsulation machine used to manufacture gelatin capsules for pharmaceutical products, as well as the Detroit Children's Museum, which occupied the building from the 1990s until its closure in 2011. Since 2013, housed here has been the Hellenic Museum of Michigan, one of only two such museums in the country at the time, with a mission of celebrating the heritage and culture of the Greek-American community in Detroit and statewide. |
Date | |
Source | Own work |
Author | Andre Carrotflower |
Camera location | 42° 21′ 37.54″ N, 83° 03′ 54.28″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 42.360428; -83.065078 |
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Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
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current | 23:49, 4 February 2021 | 3,024 × 4,032 (3.95 MB) | Andre Carrotflower (talk | contribs) | Uploaded own work with UploadWizard |
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Metadata
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Camera manufacturer | Apple |
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Camera model | iPhone 6s Plus |
Exposure time | 1/1,115 sec (0.00089686098654709) |
F-number | f/2.2 |
ISO speed rating | 25 |
Date and time of data generation | 10:23, 15 December 2020 |
Lens focal length | 4.15 mm |
Latitude | 42° 21′ 37.54″ N |
Longitude | 83° 3′ 54.28″ W |
Altitude | 194.956 meters above sea level |
Horizontal resolution | 72 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 72 dpi |
Software used | 14.2 |
File change date and time | 10:23, 15 December 2020 |
Exposure Program | Normal program |
Exif version | 2.31 |
Date and time of digitizing | 10:23, 15 December 2020 |
Meaning of each component |
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APEX shutter speed | 10.12260439142 |
APEX aperture | 2.2750070480205 |
APEX brightness | 10.102518910186 |
APEX exposure bias | 0 |
Metering mode | Pattern |
Flash | Flash did not fire, compulsory flash suppression |
DateTimeOriginal subseconds | 912 |
DateTimeDigitized subseconds | 912 |
Supported Flashpix version | 1 |
Color space | Uncalibrated |
Sensing method | One-chip color area sensor |
Scene type | A directly photographed image |
Custom image processing | HDR (original saved) |
Exposure mode | Auto exposure |
White balance | Auto white balance |
Focal length in 35 mm film | 29 mm |
Scene capture type | Standard |
Speed unit | Kilometers per hour |
Speed of GPS receiver | 0 |
Reference for direction of image | True direction |
Direction of image | 306.224609375 |
Reference for bearing of destination | True direction |
Bearing of destination | 306.224609375 |
IIM version | 2 |