Lady Darnk Juniorette
⚧🎃💀Chaos Agent Forum Lord💀🎃⚧
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2018
- Messages
- 2,395
- SL Rez
- 2005
- Joined SLU
- Dec 2012
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Hell, first time it floats, think of the mess as your sewage, power, drain and water lines disconnect as it rises up. Not to mention central air units.And after the third flood, the silt under it will be uneven, house will come down, tilt and bind, and the foundation will crack and crumble.
Beautiful place, stunning water views, but a bit close to neighboring houses for that price.Betty White’s home is up for sale. Very pretty. Very Betty.
2625 Ribera Road Carmel, California, United States – Luxury Home For Sale
View this luxury home located at 2625 Ribera Road Carmel, California, United States. Sotheby's International Realty gives you detailed information on real estate listings in Carmel, California, United States.www.sothebysrealty.com
Slate/tile roofing, brick, and stone are relatively low maintenance. All the fiddly decorative stuff will need an artist, not a house painter, to redo. I have e-books from a century ago on how to build houses like this. This would have been a high-end home from the start. Ordinary people didn't have houses this fancy.(pretty house)
The upkeep must be insane.
Don't worry about them -- looks like they're going to fall into the ocean pretty soon, anyway.Beautiful place, stunning water views, but a bit close to neighboring houses for that price.
So not on my dream list.
Did they live in caves?Ordinary people didn't have houses this fancy.
Aaaaaaaaaaahhhhhh, squeeeeeeee! Pretty! Want to see it up close and go inside!![]()
The upkeep must be insane.
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The Hermann Weinhardt House - Chicago, Illinois, USA - Victorian and Bavarian Gingerbread home designed by architect William Ohlhaber in 1888 | Places picked by Brani
homehouseSource: i.redd.it More USAreminder to my fellow americans that China has 1 million + uyghur prisoners being tortured, killed, experimented on and getting their organs harvested by the chinese government every day, a modern day holocaustdaygovernmentSource: i.redd.itRain is likely to...places.branipick.com
Even in so-called "cave man" days, most people didn't live in caves. We just have a biased view because caves preserve artifacts better for archaeologists to find. A typical home of the time would be like this one from the Sears mail-order home catalog of the same era:Did they live in caves?
In so called "cave man" days, there was no Sears catalog.Even in so-called "cave man" days, most people didn't live in caves.
What is a Sears catalog?In so called "cave man" days, there was no Sears catalog.
The Sears catalog started as a mailer in 1888 to a full length catalog of products, and went out of print with the final publication in 1993.What is a Sears catalog?
That first catalog released in 1888 focused on watches and jewelry. Over time it included many more things, including clothing, swimsuits, and homes.Beginning with mail order goods the company followed the railroad in America’s westward expansion and quickly became a national institution providing a wide variety of goods.
That sounds like a good deal. The picture is from 1908. The inflation calculator I found only goes back to 1913 but says that would be about $21,000 now.Even in so-called "cave man" days, most people didn't live in caves. We just have a biased view because caves preserve artifacts better for archaeologists to find. A typical home of the time would be like this one from the Sears mail-order home catalog of the same era:
www.searsarchives.com/homes/images/1908-1914/1908_0115.jpg
Complete with lead pipes and an electrical outlet in nearly every room. For insulation, save up your Sears catalogs.That sounds like a good deal. The picture is from 1908. The inflation calculator I found only goes back to 1913 but says that would be about $21,000 now.
I've read almost all of Anne's books including her non science fictions. The Lady was the first book of hers I read. I just can't seem to get into the Acorna series though. I'm one of the few people who like the crystal singer series. I think the only other series I haven't read is the Coelura series.I think I've read all but three of those. I don't recognize the last two and I don't think I read First Fall.
Have you read any of the Helva series (Ship who Sang etc)?
Labor and lumber were relatively cheap a century ago. Also homes were smaller. The one I linked to was about 800 square feet, and the second floor were truncated rooms due to the roof line.That sounds like a good deal. The picture is from 1908. The inflation calculator I found only goes back to 1913 but says that would be about $21,000 now.