[A store entryway, somewhere in downstate Illinois. Click for a larger view.]
Words from hexagons: a beautiful feature of the dowdy world.
I once lived in a Boston apartment building with “THE GRESHAM” tiled into the entryway floor. How come I never took a photograph?
Another tile-centric post
96th and Lexington
[Dad, I saw this floor after I made your card.]
Friday, July 26, 2013
SMITH BUILDING
By Michael Leddy at 11:41 AM
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comments: 4
Seeing this sign, you'd think you'd dowd' and gone to heaven. :)
(I think I may have used that already.)
Especially if your name is Smith.
(Your pun is new to me, I think).
This is awesome! I love the tile murals in in the subway, and always despair when I see how filthy they almost invariably are.
Your idea for a card is top-notch (everyone knows hexagons are the best shape.)
It's not quite the same thing, but have you seen the Met's Arabic art section recently? They refreshed it a few years ago and it features some incredible tile work.
They had moroccan artisans in to create a tiled "courtyard" replica which is a real thing, but the very best is an AWESOME 13th century tile prayer arch. It is so incredible that I'd entreat you and your dad to make a pilgrimage with no preliminary research. (But, it's likely you have seen it...The courtyard is new in the last 5 years, but I have no info that the mihrab has not been in their collection for some time.)
Also, I too enjoy seeing numbers under 100 written out. (Could it be called "romanization"? Japanese rendered in our alphabet is said to have been "romanized"; along the way I co-opted that term.)
I’ll remember the Met Arabic section for a future visit. I was there last year and the year before, but elsewhere in the museum.
I don’t know if there’s a word for numbers as words, but I like the idea of words whenever possible. I’d think of Romanization as that I, V, X, L stuff. :)
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