May. 19th, 2010

swan_tower: (academia)
I never wrote up a report on the first book I read out of this series, Georgian and Regency Houses Explained, but this can stand for both; they're pretty similar works. Skinny little books with a lot of pictures, seemingly intended for a market consisting of people who occupy or otherwise have an interest in the houses of different periods: there's a timeline at the back, showing when different features came into and went out of fashion, so you can try to ID your house (or renovations thereof) by time period.

But in the course of serving this need, Yorke does two very useful things: first, he gives an overview of how styles changed over time (between the Georgian and Regency periods, or throughout the loooooong Victorian period), and second, he breaks the houses down by class of room, giving sample floorplans, and talking about how those rooms would be decorated. He's much more interested in fixtures than furniture -- with this book in hand, I could probably date a coal grate to within about twenty years -- but where the actual structure is concerned, his books are a minor goldmine. (The Victorian book of this series lacks the stultifyingly boring section showing different kinds of drainpipes and door styles that the G&R book had; I tried to pay attention to that bit last time, but really, unless you're trying to date the house you live in by the depth of the window-box, its use is limited.)

He's done a whole series of these things -- "England's Living History" -- not just for houses but also bridges, churches, even narrowboats. They're all fairly small, but based on the data sample I have so far, clear and useful for the topics they cover.
swan_tower: (armor)
For those who have been following the Adventure of the Book I'm Totally Not Working On, I Swear, here is the present list of knightly names:

  • Audacia (Courage)
  • Castimonia (Purity)
  • Justitia (Justice)
  • Misericordia (Mercy)
  • Obedentia (Obedience)
  • Patientia (Patience)
  • Reverentia (Reverence)
  • Sollertia (Skill)
  • Sophia (Wisdom)
  • Temperantia (Temperance)
  • Valentia (Strength)
  • Vigilantia (Vigilance)

I may end up tweaking it, but for now, that's the set.

Now I'm off to see if I can convince myself to do my Victorian writing now, making my evening simpler, and also leaving me time to play with this . . . .
swan_tower: (angry kitten)
Cat Valente on Lost:
But here's the thing, guys. If you don't want to get tarred with the SF brush, you don't get to play with our toys, either. That means you do not get any of the following exciting action figures: monsters, immortal beings, time travel, alternate universes, glowcaves, Egyptian mythology, electromagnetic magic, insta-healing, psychic powers, Dark Lords, Lords of Light, magical touched by an angel fatecakes, teleportation, mystical islands, or bodily possession. Get your sticky hands off them--you'll only break them. Make a sitcom and shut up, if you want to howl about not being SF. Make a gritty procedural. Make Thirty-Something, I don't know. But don't make an SF show and then prance around telling everyone it's SUPER REALISTIC while trying to conceal your painful giant quantum rabbit erection. You can't trot out all those shiny SF baubles and then refuse to develop them or treat them seriously.

And while we're on the topic of TV and not respecting stuff? I'm at a point where I would like to ban all shows from touching the topic of sf/f community, including but not limited to: comic book fans, LARPers, Renfest folk, players of video games, and anything else of a remotely geeky stripe. Just leave them alone, TV people. You don't understand those groups, and what's worse, you don't want to understand them; you just want to toss them in because you've decided to do an episode about people who are totally detached from reality and can't keep their non-fantasy lives in balance with anything else. And you've decided we are those people. Kindly piss off, leave the geeks out of your police procedural or whatever it is you're making, and stick with things you actually have respect for.

It's not what Cat was ranting about, but it was on my mind, so I decided to kill two birds with one ineffectual blog post. After all, that's what the internets are for.
swan_tower: (Midnight Never Come)
Bidding for the second piece of Onyx Court secret history currently stands at $20. A recent update from the auction mods says they're a little over halfway to the goal of $10K, so every bit definitely helps.

Remember, you have until the end of the day (Eastern time) on May 23rd to bid.
swan_tower: (albino owl)
I don't suppose anyone reading this journal speaks Castilian Spanish? (i.e. the Spanish of Spain, not Latin America.) I could use some help with incidental words of a casual variety, like endearments and insults, that probably vary from culture to culture (and therefore shouldn't just be pulled from a dictionary).

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