Exemplifying the dreamcore aesthetic, New York City-based 3D artist Jared Pike’s surreal series ‘Dream Pool’ is a collection of Modernist swimming pools with geometric designs,...
Make a bold statement with these door frame words & phrases. They will suit any home, room, salon, bar & restaurant. Can be used as a door topper, displayed on a shelf, picture frame or even just attached to the wall. Made from 3mm acrylic. DRAMATIC EXIT Dimensions Width - 42.5 Height - 5cm Easily attaches to the wall with high adhesive tape which is attached
Spice up your space with this funky and modern 3D printed door topper featuring quirky decor sayings! Expertly 3D printed with smooth PLA plastic, this interesting wall and shelf decor piece is available in 3 sizes to showcase your unique taste. This door sign topper is available in 3 sizes: 20cm, 30cm, 38.5cm wide. Pick the perfect size for your space! Choose from our list of witty, motivational, or trendy sayings to customize with your own flair. Minor defects can occur with 3D printing but do not impact appearance. Decorate any room in your home with this customizable and quirky wall decor piece! Perfect for kitchens, bedrooms, offices, dorms and more. With multiple color options, you can find the perfect match for your funky home decor style. Display your personality with this modern 3D printed door topper! Let me know if you would like me to modify the description further to better highlight the requested keywords for the customizable 3D printed wall/shelf/door decor item.
the latest in an occasional series. The longest room, at 195 feet, in Oxford, the Codrington Library, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, built in the 1730s at the College of All Souls of the Faithful Departed, a college founded in 1438 by Henry VI and Henry Chichele the Archbishop of Canterbury. A library and occasional dining room. Finding Angus McBean's house in a 1980s edition of World of Interiors has had me sitting on the floor in my library looking for what else there might be. The 1980s were strange years, saturated as they were, in terms of architecture and interior design, with two major styles, each equally nostalgic - the English Country House Style and Post-Modernism. The two styles did mate at times and the pups of that liaison were quite laughable, or mystifying, depending on one's predilection. It was in the 1980s, too, that Neo-Baroque, a Goth combination of curlicue, skull, horn and gold, with none of the majestic scale of the original but with all the quirkiness without the nobility, gained a foothold and galvanized magazine editors into paroxysms of delight. Also, in those years, te Deums, (or rather ta-dahs) were sung to owners of ancient piles who apparently for nothing more than an acknowledgement or, more likely a surge in entrance ticket sales, allowed photographers and stylists to disturb and record the dust of countless generations. Such an ancient pile you see above, and very thankful I was to find it. Ta-dah! I forgot to attribute, thus .... photography by James Mortimer, accompanying an essay by David Sexton, from World of Interiors, June 1986.
All the characters in this Preferences I do NOT own only Y/n Y/L/N :characters: -John B Routledge -JJ Maybank -Pope Heyward -Sarah Cameron -Kiara Carrera -Rafe Carmeron -Topper Thornton -Cleo