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Friday, August 02, 2024

2024.0802.0002...






7 comments:

Infidel753 said...

#1: You couldn't ever be drunk if you lived in that house. Far too easy to plummet off that no-banister staircase while weaving up it. And that sofa is so hideous that not even JD Vance would touch it. Are our designers becoming afflicted with some mental disorder that makes them unable to comprehend that shapes other than rectangles exist?

#2: Awesome image, but it's a good thing trees don't get vertigo.

#4: A masterpiece of timing to capture such a shot. Strange to think that until we had high-speed photography, no human ever saw water in such forms -- they pass by too fast to perceive.

uptonking said...

Love nature and spectacle, but that first photo. It looks like a set I designed for a radical reinterpretation of Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?

anonymous said...

Image 2 -
Sentiers mystiques de l’Indochine,
Baie d’Halong au Viet-Nam.
-Beau Mec

SickoRicko said...

Infidel - I assumed that illuminated bar parallel to the steps was the banister.

Infidel753 said...

That's only on the wall side, though -- there's nothing along the open side of the stairs like a railing to physically block somebody from falling off.

JiEL said...

That staircase would be illegal here in P. of Québec and maybe all over Canada.

Milleson said...

After researching the first photo, that stairway is in a private residence in Ontinyent, Valencia, Spain. The LED lightbar isn't a handrail, it's there to illuminate the steps. Building codes in the U.S. also prohibit this approach to stairways and would never pass code. It seems some countries are on board with this design aesthetic used in a private residence, I wonder if any travelers who have been to Spain saw stairways without handrails in public spaces. As for the room design, not appreciated from this viewer. Too stark, gray, cold and uncomfortable. Better used in a modern museum. And the couch, might as well choose to sit on a slab in the morgue.