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There once was a man from nantucket
There once was a man from nantucket








It’s the end of oil and the entire world has actually managed to switch over to clean energy, everyone lives in gorgeous green cities and close-knit small towns with super efficient greenhouse agriculture with solar and wind powerĪll the suburbs and manor-house things have been abandoned because they’re too far away from population centres and there aren’t any cars There’s also a hidden plot about the rest of the world The hardest thing in the and is to lure and be able to support a cougar, because it requires the entire property to be FOREST with deer and berry bushes and a stream The goal of the game is to get it so quiet and wild that you can support entire ecosystems in what used to be a super colonial classist mansion You plant seeds and wait for them to grow, then train them over the top of the walls and wrap around the statuesĪttract birds and squirrels with water and nesting areas and they’ll bring you seeds

#There once was a man from nantucket crack

Let me grow trees up through the roofs and on top of those perfect stone walls and crack them and break them down let me plant wildflowers and berries and lure birds and butterflies into the yard. let me grow grass up through those perfect tiled patios and algae in the fountain and vines up through those marble statues and pillars cracking them in half. View more posts about decorative arts and patternįiled under lobster found poetry sorta not really? poem poetryĭo you know what I want? I want a game where you play the forces of overgrowing nature, where you systematically destroy the mansion in the GardenScapes game I keep seeing ads for. It because the vibrancy of the plates is even more dazzling than how they appear online! I made an appointment with our friends over at Milwaukee Public Library’sĪt several of his portfolios, and plan to feature more designs in the future. If you ever have a chance see one in person, I highly recommend Seguy produced a number of decorative arts portfolios Intended to be used for interior art, textiles, and fashion.Į. Overlapping way, and plates that are very decorative, with imaginative designsĪnd bold colors, inspired by the forms of insects. What I love about the plates of this portfolio is that there are both extremely realistic illustrations of insects, presented in a stylized, There is an essay called “Insect Men” by Timothy Young that describes this case of mistaken identity. There is some confusion about the biographical details of theĪrtist Émile-Allain Séguybecause he is often confused with the well-knownįrench entomologist Eugène Séguy who was active during the same period. Printing, where each layer of color is applied by painting gouache through a stencil. The portfolios of colored plates were created using the labor-intensive Known for his ornamental patterns of plants and insects in Art Nouveau and Artĭeco styles. Séguy, whose name is often abbreviated E. Portfolio of pochoir prints, published by Duchartre and Van Buggenhoudt in 1929. Public Library’s Rare Book Room: French artist E. Today we are featuring a portfolio found in Milwaukee








There once was a man from nantucket