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Louis is the best bunny in the world. He is free to roam the apartment but his food and litterbox are in this cage. Instead of looking like prey and generally being bitchy, he likes being petted. Not only did he repeatedly come up to me for petting and sniffing, he was following me around for a while!
Jamie Olivers restaurant 15 in Cornwall 2009 . my old canon ixus. thinking it stands up well.......so does Lou!
I took this at the Chuck Close printmaking exhibition earlier this year at the Museum of Contemporary Art down Circular Quay way. It was an interesting show and had a few good photo ops too! Here you are looking at a flat wall from a slight angle.
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La maison de l'Infante, ou maison Joanoenia, est une demeure historique située à Saint-Jean-de-Luz dans les Pyrénées-Atlantiques. Elle accueillit l'infante d'Espagne, Marie-Thérèse, pour son mariage avec Louis XIV. Les façades sont inscrites par les monuments historiques en 1925 et l'ensemble en 1992.
Cette demeure patricienne, construite vers 1640 par l'armateur basque Joannot de Haraneder , donne sur le port de Saint-Jean-de-Luz ; elle se remarque par ses tours, ses façades en brique rose et en pierre et ses deux galeries à l'italienne à cinq arcades sur la façade principale .
Elle accueillit en juin 1660 la reine-mère et l'infante Marie-Thérèse pour son mariage avec Louis XIV dont la cérémonie eut lieu le 9 juin 1660 en l'église Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Saint-Jean-de-Luz. Les deux mariés étaient âgés de vingt-deux ans et doublement cousins germains. La veille du mariage, ils étaient allés prier au couvent des Récollets de Ciboure, de l'autre côté du port, accompagnés de la reine-mère, du cardinal Mazarin et de leurs suites. Le jour de la cérémonie de mariage, l'infante qui était petite et blonde, joufflue avec de petits yeux bleus et les lèvres épaisses comme tous les Habsbourgs, était vêtue d'une robe de brocart d’argent recouverte d’un manteau de velours violet semé de fleurs de lys d’or prolongé par une traîne de dix aunes de longueur. Le roi, quant à lui, était vêtu de drap d'or voilé de dentelle noire .
This patrician residence, built around 1640 by the Basque shipowner Joannot de Haraneder , overlooks the port of Saint-Jean-de-Luz; it stands out for its towers, its facades in pink brick and stone and its two Italian-style galleries with five arches on the main facade .
In June 1660, she welcomed the queen mother and the Infanta Marie-Thérèse for her marriage to Louis XIV whose ceremony took place on June 9, 1660 in the Saint-Jean-Baptiste church of Saint-Jean-de-Luz . The two newlyweds were twenty-two years old1 and two first cousins. The day before the wedding, they had gone to pray at the Récollets de Ciboure convent, on the other side of the port, accompanied by the queen mother, Cardinal Mazarin and their suites. On the day of the wedding ceremony, the Infanta who was petite and blonde, chubby with small blue eyes and thick lips like all Habsburgs, was dressed in a silver brocade gown covered with a velvet cloak. purple with golden lily flowers extended by a train ten ells in length. The king, for his part, was dressed in gold cloth veiled with black lace.
deadline.com/2021/03/lou-ottens-dead-cassette-inventor-co...
I would probably be a wealthy man today if not for the cassette tape. Each of those cases holds 12 cassettes, times X cases, plus Y number of cases not in the photo = $$$. Actually I found the tapes held up very well, Maxell was my brand of choice. It was the cassette decks that always started eating tapes or died on me. No telling how many of those I went through over the years, especially the car decks! I am proud to say I managed to avoid the 8-track tape.
Another link saying even the cassette is trying to make a comeback, maybe I can buy a new boom box that works!