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[personal profile] brooksmoses
A selection of interesting things that I found online over the last month or so and have been meaning to share with people:

What happens if you go way overboard and then some in making a "cat-friendly" house. And really well constructed, too; none of the cat-related bits look particularly out of place.

A photo of a duck, by [livejournal.com profile] timprov. Not often that you see one from quite that angle.

A derelict castle of sorts. Another photo set in the category of "intriguing ruins".

Photos of a really nifty Art Nouveau doorway and building front at 6 Rue du Lac in Brussels. The fellow who posted that picture has a collection of Art Nouveau architecture photos on Flikr, which has lots of neat things in it. A Google images search on "art nouveau doorway" find quite a lot of other interesting things too, and here's another photographer's Flikr set of Art Nouveau doorways.

Modern Art: A reductio. The artwork of Yves Klein. [livejournal.com profile] suzimoses will find this way far out on the end of the category of abstract art that she doesn't like, but I find it rather interesting considered as a whole context including the artist and galleries and so forth. The fact that people paid for these paintings and found them enthralling is deeply fascinating to me.

A random recipe for meatball soup, from Penzeys Spices. (I like meatball soup -- particularly the one at Casa de Lupe, one of the local Mexican restaurants -- and this seemed like a good recipe.) Speaking of which, they're opening a store in Menlo Park soon; yay!

The Jules Verne: a beautiful little model triplane made mostly out of drinking straws and yellow sandwich wrap.

According to this Making Light thread, it is in fact possible to get genuine Southern food -- at least, breakfast food -- in the Bay Area. This is the place. I shall be needing to go investigate this!

[livejournal.com profile] tiger_spot pointed me at this journal article entitled "You Bastard: A Narrative Exploration of the Experience of Indignation within Organizations". It sounds quite entertaining.

This photograph of Chicago rail yards gives me a very strong feeling of deep crisp bitter cold; the sort where snow goes crunch and breath clouds just hang in the air. Brrr! I'm not entirely sure why, and how much of that's in the photo and how much of it's reminding me of the time I was in Chicago on Thanksgiving waiting an hour in an inadequate coat for a bus that had been rerouted.

A different photo of books organized by color, which [livejournal.com profile] cobalt_00 linked to in comments last time I posted one of these link summaries. Rather fewer books than a whole bookstore, but still striking. I wonder what a shelf sorted by lightness rather than hue looks like. Or, for that matter, saturation.

A set of photographs from some Greek/Roman ruins in the oldest city in Romania. The city was active from around the 7th century B.C. to the 7th century A.D.; I'm not sure which period these ruins are from. Some really pretty photos, though.

Date: 2008-11-02 12:26 am (UTC)
ext_12542: My default bat icon (Default)
From: [identity profile] batwrangler.livejournal.com
That cat-friendly house looks like a more demure version of Bob Walker's Cats' House. (http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0836221834/ref=sib_dp_pt#reader-link)

Date: 2008-11-02 09:41 am (UTC)
aedifica: Me with my hair as it is in 2020: long, with blue tips (Default)
From: [personal profile] aedifica
Thanks! I don't often follow links, but this morning it was just the thing--I fell asleep for a nap at about 5:30 yesterday afternoon and slept through to 3:30 this morning, only I discovered on awakening that it was really only 2:30 due to the time change. So now I have several hours to fill before it starts feeling like day.

The derelict castle is puzzling me--who makes a castle with red brick? But they said it was "an island castle," so maybe it was made by people who thought that was what a castle was supposed to look like and didn't have sufficient stone handy. Neat pictures, either way.

The Jules Verne is quite striking in that light.

I think it would behoove the people who posted the picture of the Chicago railyard to post it at a size that will fit well on more monitors. I expect if I'd been viewing this on my work monitor I'd have been fine, but I'm here at home with my laptop, and I had to scroll sideways and down to get the whole thing.

I really enjoyed the photographs of the Histria ruins. I was a Classics major, and I spent a few weeks in Greece looking at archaeological sites on a class trip led by one of my professors. Neat to have a little of that this morning.

Date: 2008-11-02 11:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hitchhiker.livejournal.com
ooh, it'll be lovely to have a penzey's in the area!

Date: 2008-11-02 06:05 pm (UTC)
aedifica: Me with my hair as it is in 2020: long, with blue tips (Default)
From: [personal profile] aedifica
I followed the new link and got a much better idea of the picture. Cold indeed!
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