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Lisnaholic 12-27-2021 03:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DianneW (Post 2195086)
I enjoyed reading about it myself..
...The internet is far and beyond what I ever believed it to be. I get to see and learn all kinds of things , that gives you a good outlook and being able to converse that little but better than when I was much younger.
some of the link I would think is in my first post but still interesting to read and I think the good comes out of any tree. It is life giving.

You sound like my brother-in-law, who spends ages roaming around wikipedia as one article suggests to him the next....

Quote:

Been in that pub many times..Sevenoaks...then we were all made aware of drinking and driving, that altered things...
I didn't mean to be mysterious, but I don't like to put too many personal identifiers in my posts. That pub is in Wandsworth, so you must be thinking of one of the other hundreds of Green Man pubs in and around London. Perhaps you were too drunk at the time to notice how it looked ;)
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Anyone who has watched the Netflix series, Locke & Key, will recognize this mansion in Massachusetts immediately:_


But sadly, it's not real and it's not in Massachusetts:-

Quote:

While Keyhouse would undoubtedly make a cool place to visit, it’s as fictional as the town it’s located in. Unfortunately, the mansion isn’t one physical place as it appears. The outside shots are mostly fabricated, while the various rooms seen inside of the Locke family’s home make up a detailed set. As for the series’ filming location, Locke & Key shoots in Toronto, Canada. That means the lush backdrops viewers enjoy aren’t actually from Massachusetts — despite the show being set there.

Frownland 12-27-2021 07:00 PM

Yet another reason to avoid Massachusetts.

Lisnaholic 12-28-2021 09:24 AM

^ Well, keep that attitude to yourself when you meet Jonathan Richman, ok?


DianneW 12-30-2021 04:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lisnaholic (Post 2195040)
Thanks for putting together such an interesting post, Dianne! I love the photos of the faces carved in wood. Back in the old days people built with such inventiveness and detail it's hard to believe. How many hours work, how much skill, is there in just one of those faces?!
I've heard about the ancient origins of the Green Man before, but was surprised to see that there are traces of the same guy in Europe too.

Not the most spectacular Green Man pub, but it does have the honour of being a pub that I used to drink in on a regular basis:-

https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/i...qeOOg&usqp=CAU

It is on a heath with a Roman Camp about half a mile a way. The heath is an area of relatively high, relatively dry ground on the edge of London and today it has a big roundabout (plus underpass) where two A-roads meet. My guess is that it has always been an area to meet; for ancient Green Man celebrations, for the Romans, for medieval travellers, and for latter-day pub goers like myself, cavorting naked at midnight under the watchful eyes of The Green Man, god of procreation.

well it is White....:pssst:

https://cdn.businessyab.com/assets/u..._man_89832.jpg

Lisnaholic 12-31-2021 06:27 AM

^ What a beautiful looking pub! Very understandable that you should get the two principle white buildings confused.

By the way, I wonder if you have any special tip about how you find such nice big pictures to post?
I usually go to Google: "images of...." but all the best pictures are locked; the only ones I can copy are the meagre-sized ones I have been posting for some time. :(

DianneW 12-31-2021 09:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lisnaholic (Post 2195590)
^ What a beautiful looking pub! Very understandable that you should get the two principle white buildings confused.

By the way, I wonder if you have any special tip about how you find such nice big pictures to post?
I usually go to Google: "images of...." but all the best pictures are locked; the only ones I can copy are the meagre-sized ones I have been posting for some time. :(

I had not thought that my pics where bigger than yours....
take this as a try out..
link I had open to save the photo..on this site of course you have to save online...
so have, and this is the link I used
https://www.thelocal.fr/20171218/nin...hadnt-heard-of

here is the photo first saved it in my documents then downloaded to the online photo programme I use...imgBB
then open it in full and post from the oblong boxed mountain above..

https://i.ibb.co/Jv74cwq/unusal-castles.jpg
now that is small I see..try it with the same one and see how your's comes out..if you wish...
this is the same one but done a basic edit and doubled the size
https://i.ibb.co/448CsKm/unusal-castles.jpg
doubled it again....OMG...

https://i.ibb.co/hmryD3t/unusal-castles.jpg

Lisnaholic 12-31-2021 09:23 AM

Thanks Dianne! I hope you and others will bear with me as I try things out here. This is my result for "copy address of image":

https://www.thelocal.fr/wp-content/u...3052583891.jpg

Yep, that's not bad. I think what I should do is go to original source websites rather than to "Google Images of..". They seem to have put most of their stuff under some copyright/license restriction.

Lisnaholic 12-31-2021 09:53 AM

https://bocadolobo.com/blog/wp-conte...yev-Center.jpg

Zaha Hadid is an architect with a huge international reputation. Good for her to have done so well (as an Iraqi woman) in a profession dominated by guys. She has been dubbed “The Queen of The Curve” because here and elsewhere, she has done for building materials what Salvador Dali did for watches: melted them.

Lisnaholic 12-31-2021 10:13 AM

Spectacular stand-alone buildings like the above are great for making your name as an architect, but in European cities, already chockablock with architectural gems, I like the fitting-in style of design which has the fancy name of "Contextualism". If ever a single building defined this approach, it's this one:-

https://blog.buildllc.com/wp-content...er-Roecker.jpg

It's modern, but it works as a perfect compliment to what's there already. Together, each building looks better than they would've done on their own. Instead of slap-in-the-face architecture, this is well-mannered architecture that respects, even enhances, the past.

DianneW 12-31-2021 10:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lisnaholic (Post 2195640)
https://bocadolobo.com/blog/wp-conte...yev-Center.jpg

Zaha Hadid is an architect with a huge international reputation. Good for her to have done so well (as an Iraqi woman) in a profession dominated by guys. She has been dubbed “The Queen of The Curve” because here and elsewhere, she has done for building materials what Salvador Dali did for watches: melted them.

Something between a Plane and BIG Fish in my mind....:laughing:
That is certainly huge and impressive, not sure it would look good in my commune though..mostly Ancient...
https://www.communes.com/images/thum...ais_284689.jpg

This picture was not saved to anything but straight off the web page....
The view is almost the same today..A couple of the old houses have caravans in the gardens to live in whilst they are renovating there really cheap properties they purchased...Sauze Vaussis is 5 minutes from our commune..really it would be classed as a village these days.
The Street to the front right had at one time shops all along it..I arrived and there where none until you get to the far right corner, a Hairdressers and the other side there are several shops, then around to the main square Banks, Bars, Post Office and a Co-op shop that is not too bad for a stand alone shop with prices...Super U is further on and takes all the trade like super markets do in England..


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