I have always known what I wanted, and that was beauty... in every form. Joan Crawford
I never go outside unless I look like Joan Crawford the movie star. If you want to see the girl next door, go next door. Joan CrawfordIsn't that second photo the most pretty you've ever seen Joan Crawford? Have a great weekend, everyone!
One more just for fun...
Women's Lib? Poor little things. They always look so unhappy. Have you noticed how bitter their faces are?
Haha - really, Joan??? I mean - REALLY?? Who was more liberated than you!

Samuel Mockbee (1944-2001) was a very famous architect: not neccesarily for his own buildings but for the studio he created at Auburn University, the Rural Studio.
House with wall made out of cardboard scraps
Lily Friedlander addition - Atlanta, GA.
interiors of a chapel -which utilized 80 Chevy Caprice windshields at the cost of $120
Yancey Chapel interior, 1995, made from concrete and old tires!
the Hale County animal shelter
restroom at Pearl Landing
He was aiming to inspire these poor communities into something greater: they deserved better than substandard housing and a substandard life in a rich country. All of the recipients were so proud of their houses and many helped in the construction of them.
the 'butterfly' house
bottles cast into this wall of this house in Masons Bend, AL. provide light.
detail of home created from old license plates adhered to a waxed cardboard frame.
Many of you have probably heard of Fonthill and the Mercer Museum outside of Philadelphia -the eccentric concrete buildings by Henry Chapman Mercer (1856-1930). One of the things he was best known for was his tile work.
The tiles are in prominent buildings all around the world -but the largest collection of them is at the Pennsylvania state Capitol building in Harrisburg ( even the Casino in Monte Carlo has Mercer tiles!)
Here you can see a large selection of tiles adorning a fireplace in the Mercer Museum. I think you can see the strong similarity between these unique tiles and the German stove plates which he collected. There are a large number of these (seen below) still in the Mercer collection.
Below is the Mercer Museum ( too beautiful to not post!).
This beautiful brunch was featured in a beautiful country house in Worstershire. Isn't it a great place to spend a cold winter's day?




