View allAll Photos Tagged tinyhome
...i wanted to do this just for fun -- just an old billboard repurposed into a little one-room shack... the billboard has 6 texture changes (by touch)...
right now it's at 39 li -- i'm not sure it's done yet but i hope to make up my mind tomorrow...
This tree house is located at the entrance of Rabindra Museum, which is a museum located in Mungpoo, near Kalimpong, in the state of West Bengal, India. Poet Rabindranath Tagore stayed in this house in 1938 and 1939, at the invitation of poet and novelist Maitreyi Devi, the wife of quinologist dr. M.M.Sen
Tonight's clouds made this abandoned tiny home the perfect place to take a photo. This house has been vacant for as long as I can remember.
The mammatus clouds are my favorite type of clouds. I have tons of photos to process now.
Beaver County Oklahoma
With the current popularity of tiny homes, I saw this and thought that the idea was nothing new! I suspect the new ones maybe a little less draughty though!
© Dominic Scott 2024
A small eerie cabin, built on the rocks is now abandoned. When walking through Yellowknife’s Old Town, you’ll notice this theme of people building structures on rocks. Building on rock was so popular because there was really no other choice due to the lack of flat ground in the area. The area this cabin was built on is know by locals as “The Rock”, which held water tanks to supply Old Town residents with water. I was out on a evening photoshoot with my dad when we were intrigued by this small cabin. Make sure to check out Michael Ewen’s photo of this small eerie cabin!
Spotted in Yellowstone! Cutest travel home ever...people were snapping photos of this instead of the geysers!!
supervises....
While still stuck indoors ...
Charlie supervises the after
Thanksgiving tradition of
....starting the Christmas Chair....
Each year I combine an old rickety chair with my pitiful fake Christmas tree to make something different and fun...
mulewings.blogspot.com/2023/11/the-christmas-tree-starts....
Spotted this tiny, shriveled apple clinging to a branch like it had stories to tell. With its strawberry-like texture and a curious little hole in front, it almost feels like a woodland creature might be living inside. The soft bokeh and muted autumn tones wrap it all in a quiet kind of magic—just a fleeting moment of orchard whimsy.
This is my tiny house LEGO build.
You can help make it a real LEGO set by voting for it on LEGO Ideas:
ideas.lego.com/projects/c24cb1d2-eaa0-443b-8c97-7bbd5f77bb16
Here is the bedroom for the Tiny Home!
Credit Details for this space can be found here: Beauvais
Styled by me!
These amazingggg pics are by Lauren Minuet!
This is my tiny house LEGO build.
You can help make it a real LEGO set by voting for it on LEGO Ideas:
ideas.lego.com/projects/c24cb1d2-eaa0-443b-8c97-7bbd5f77bb16
Since the early 1900s, this area was a beach resort on Long Island Sound. Filled with rental cottages, it was a summer place for generations of people.
The buildings across the street were torn down in 1965. For just one summer, 1966, we had direct line of site to Long Island Sound from our house on Rock Street (just a glimpse of our house on the right with pink shingles).
In 1967, The Surf Club West built a modern pool club exactly where those cottages stood for almost 70 years.
Below is a view from 1966 where we could actually see the beach after the cottages were demolished and before the Surf Club built its facilities on this site.
Yuki contemplates making a change.
“Maybe even two rooms.”
- - - - -
Created for the Toy Sunday theme, TINY HOME.
This is exactly how I remember this neighborhood by Long Island Sound from my teenage years. Being so close to the water, the sun had a particularly bright quality to it. Toward the evening, it mellowed to a yellowish-golden color. Everything seen here is now completely gone.
While most of the country is quarantined due to the COVID-19 pandemic, walks with my dog are my only opportunities to get outside. Yesterday the city was very quiet - but I noticed this small home on a block I rarely travel
The wife and I stayed in a grain bin converted to a tiny home for the weekend. Based off a small homestead farm run by a friendly family. It was very impressively done. Bedroom on the second floor, kitchen, bathroom and sitting area downstairs. It thankfully had A/C since it was 30C+ all weekend.
no air-conditioning, no stores, no gas, no cafe, no laundry, no Dr. no Dentist, no grocery's, no bar, no liquor, no beer, no wine, no cheese, no kids, no school, no internet, no wifi, no dogs, no horses, no hardware store, no motel, no 7/11, no police, no sheriff, no HWY patrol, no park, , no sports, ....and
NO PICKLEBALL !!!!!!!!!
Just bad habits, hobbits and hobbies.