BluesDave
Formerly known as DavidDecorator
- Location
- The leafy backroads of Surrey.
I can't actually remember. I must have taken the photo over a year ago.it's delightful. Whereabouts in Colliers Wood is it?
I can't actually remember. I must have taken the photo over a year ago.it's delightful. Whereabouts in Colliers Wood is it?
I can't actually remember. I must have taken the photo over a year ago.
I like looking at the pictures folks, but could you please keep the sizes down to something sensible? (That fit the browser page not a virtual monitor about the size of your wall!) It's bad enough loading them on a fast broadband link and viewing them on a widescreen monitor, but they must be a nightmare on smartphones?
I don't know what is happening to the image posting system, but some don't seem to work. I've had problems too.
SCRUMPTIOUS!![]()
Up-to-date house design in 1938. Built so that junior clerks in the city could live in the country.
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Up-to-date house design in 1929. In many ways far more practical (though actually these were pretty cheaply built). I wonder what suburbia would be like if this sort of design had caught on?
That would clearly explain why I've never been able to find it again. I must have photgraphed it when I went to look at that job in Weybridge last summer.Apparently it's at Weybridge Station in Surrey, some more info on this flickr page.
Brings to mind a story in a biography of Wittgenstein by Norman Malcolm, who recalls being stopped by the great man while walking across a quad in Cambridge and made to come down to the loos and stand up on one of the seats so's to be able to inspect the cistern mechanism, which, said W, spoke of an age when craftsmen took pride in 'doing their work to perfection, for the simple reason that that was the way it ought to be done.'http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/68/Chester_Town_Hall_(2).jpg
I have done a lot of work in the lofts here. the carpentry is amazing for something that would never be seen , and the stuff that can be seen is truly outstanding
be careful where you go with this one. Ruskin was absolutely bonkers about craftsmanship, but not quite so bonkers about paying for it. He gave contradictory instructions to the masons working on the Oxford Museum, the masons didn't get paid, and took their revenge by turning busts of 'great men' in to parrots and monkeys. And shitting off the scaffold on to poor old Ruskers' head......so it may be that most craftspeople worked for money.Brings to mind a story in a biography of Wittgenstein by Norman Malcolm, who recalls being stopped by the great man while walking across a quad in Cambridge and made to come down to the loos and stand up on one of the seats so's to be able to inspect the cistern mechanism, which, said W, spoke of an age when craftsmen took pride in 'doing their work to perfection, for the simple reason that that was the way it ought to be done.'
*looks out of window at neat row of met semis opposite*SCRUMPTIOUS!
so it may be that most craftspeople worked for money.