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wired

via vz
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blown up / overhead vs opaque vs slide projection


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speed kills



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what you can get in:

Location: Peloponnese-Messinian Mani

via ree
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talking mafia blocks


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diggers


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A

APC

OK LA

goldsmith

h p n f r h p y a c d n s

PAUL LOEBACH ON AMERICAN PRIMITIVES


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ready for the house blog spot

(it's hot. dont go out side. do some yard sale and flee market shopping in the pacific nw at home on your computer)
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here

YHBHS

de adirondack stijl

via reference library


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t1me to m4rket m0dernism


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But like much of American society, the middle-class home began to grow over time. The average size of an American house in 1950 was 983 square feet. Slowly, though, both more square footage and more amenities became part of the American dream, so that by 2004 the average home topped 2,300 square feet.

What does all that space bring? Small, out-of-the-way bedrooms like those in the Levittown houses’ “expandable attics” can be used when children are at home or guests arrive, and the open plan of their main living spaces has become the kitchen/family room that is the center of the American home today. But many of the “must-have” elements in 2010, like formal living and dining rooms, are redundant. In an era of economic austerity and a seemingly permanent energy crisis, can “less is more” become popular again?

Sadly, many of the small, architect-designed houses of the postwar period have been demolished to make way for McMansions. But those that remain, and those we know about from blueprints and photographs, have much to teach us — about the efficient use of space for storage, integrated indoor and outdoor space and the way careful design can facilitate natural ventilation. When you think about how many rooms you actually use, it seems obvious that various ideas from that optimistic era could make the next decade a happier, saner one than the overstuffed times we’ve just lived through.

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Jimmy Webb Performs Live

(stream audio)
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rip rammellzee


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motown meltdown vol.2

via monica wfmu


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Van Dyke Parks: wholesome charm at Primavera Sound

(stream audio)
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In 1968, Charles Prior Hall, a furniture designer in California decided to create the world's most comfortable chair. Taking his cue from the very popular bean bag chairs of the time, Hall filled a large inflatible vinyl bag with 300 pounds of liquid corn starch and titled his creation "the Incredible Creeping Chair."

Unfortunately, he found that when he sat in it, he tended to sink so far into the chair that he felt he was being swallowed by it. He next tried to replace the liquid starch with Jell-O ™ which soon became lumpy and uncomfortable. Finally he abandoned his idea to develop a chair and filled a rectangular piece of vinyl with water and called his creation "the water bed" (so-named after the water-filled mattresses used for over 100 years for invalids.)

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2 pole barns $5k

must dismantle yourself
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billy box container


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soft market


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Banned Trailers Return for Latest Gulf Disaster


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the art of memory (minimal film music literature poetry art)

via vz
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worlds tallest filing cabnet

via vz
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a summer place (Made mostly of willow, dogwood, maple and birch)

via ree
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tom moody is guest blogging at AFC and yes there are a lot of new rules.


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