Showing 39 items
matching net fishing
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Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1986 c
Also one other showing a six ton shot in net beside Tarpeena at sea.Colour photograph of the fish catch by the fishing boat Tarpeena showing a small catch on deck. Lakes Entrance Victoriaislands, fishing industry, waterways, houses -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1985 c
Also second photograph showing net cable off stern of boat.Colour photograph on a fishing boat, working off Wellington Cape. Showing deckies Ian Hammarstrom and Tim Anketell on deck hauling in net. Lakes Entrance Victoriafish, ships and shipping, fishing industry, ocean -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1980
Darren ? about to pull the stringColour photograph of a net of bay school whiting about to be unloaded on deck of fishing boat off Wilsons Promontory, Victoriaboats and boating, fishing industry, waterways -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, Shepherd Dennis, 1990c
... A colour photograph taken from fishing boat Minawie showing... A colour photograph taken from fishing boat Minawie showing net ...A colour photograph taken from fishing boat Minawie showing net full of whiting alongside prior to being hauled aboard, in Bass Strait Victoriafishing industry, boats and boating, ocean, fish -
Lakes Entrance Regional Historical Society (operating as Lakes Entrance History Centre & Museum)
Photograph, 1975
Pamela Star owner Jack Bolton, skipper Dennis ShepherdBlack and white photograph of the stern deck of the fishing boat Pamela Star showing trawl ropes and net on deck, taken at sea in Bass Strait off Lakes Entrance Victoria.boats and boating, fishing industry, ocean -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Equipment - Dip Net
... by fishermen Fishing leisure activity Round shaped dip net used to hold ...Common home made example of a dip net used by fishermenRound shaped dip net used to hold caught fish.fishing, leisure activity -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Equipment - Mussel bag
A hand made mussel bag using improvised materials used for removing and temporarily storing musselsQueenscliff fishermen's practical use of everyday materials to create fishing equipment.An improvised mussel bag consisting of a plastic pipe held in a circle by a metal hose clamp and a rope net suspended from it. Used to gather and hold mussels. fishing, mussels, fishing equipment -
Queenscliffe Maritime Museum
Equipment - Float
Norway, around 1840, was the first country to produce and use glass fishing floats. Many of them can still be found in local boathouses. Christopher Faye, a Norwegian merchant from Bergen, is credited with their invention. The earliest floats, including most Japanese glass fishing floats, were handmade by a glassblower. Recycled glass, especially old sake bottles in Japan, was typically used and air bubbles/imperfections in the glass are a result of the rapid recycling process. Glass floats have since been replaced by aluminum, plastic, or Styrofoam. Today most of the glass floats remaining in the ocean are stuck in a circular pattern of ocean currents in the North Pacific.By the 1940s, glass had replaced wood or cork throughout much of Europe, Russia, North America, and Japan. Japan started using the glass floats as early as 1910. Now they are still highly sought after as decoration.A glass float with intact knotted rope net attachedfishing, floats, glass floats -
Federation University Art Collection
Painting - Acrylic on paper, [The Net], by Wes Walters, 1958
Wes WALTERS (06 August 1928 - 19 August 2014) Born Mildura, Victoria From 1940 t0 1945 Wes Walters attended the Ballarat High School. He then studied architecture at the Gordon Institute in Geelong, followed by art at the Ballarat School of Mines (a division of the Ballarat School of Mines). During his time at the Ballarat Technical Art School (later Federation University Australia) Walters studied under Neville Bunning and Taylor Kelloch, and was awarded the Ballarat Ladies Art Association Scholarship in 1948. He next moved to Melbourne to work as a commercial artist with the George Patterson advertising agency. Each evening Walters studied life drawing at the Victoria Artists’ Society and taught himself anatomy. Wes Walters excelled in both abstract and realist art. He won the Art Gallery of Ballarat’s Minnie Crouch Prize for watercolour art in 1953 and 1956. He won the prestigious Archibald Prize in 1879 for his portrait of Phillip Adams. This item is part of the Federation University Art Collection. The Art Collection features over 2000 works and was listed as a 'Ballarat Treasure' in 2007.This artwork was painted by Wes Walters in 1958. Gift of Dr David Alexander, 2014art, artwork, walters, wes walters, fishing, available, sport