Do you want the nerdiest of all possible cat trees?
Of course you do.
OH GOD, YES. YES, I DO.
Tags:
#Star Trek #at first glance I thought this was just a coincidence #and then I saw the top section #and realised it was completely intentional
Do you want the nerdiest of all possible cat trees?
Of course you do.
OH GOD, YES. YES, I DO.
Tags:
#Star Trek #at first glance I thought this was just a coincidence #and then I saw the top section #and realised it was completely intentional
The BalKonzept is a German designed desk for your balcony. Just place it over the railing on your balcony and you have a desk to work at, a table to set your drinks on, or a place to put some flowers.
http://odditymall.com/balkonzept-a-balcony-desk-and-flower-box
Tags:
#love the decor fandom

Nice to know they have dyson hand dryers on the enterprise
LOLOLOL THATS
THATS EXACTLY WHAT THAT IS
Oh my god
HOW DID I MISS THIS OMFG
#good to know the reboot is keeping up the classic ST tradition #of finding random modern day items that look kind of weird #and putting them on the set #and then just saying FUTURE #in a loud voice (cakehorse)
Tags:
#Star Trek #AOS

[Those triangle pillows on DS9 look so uncomfortable. I get that the Cardassian beds were terrible, but replicating a good pillow might have helped some]
Tags:
#Star Trek #DS9 #yes this #I’m sure you could obtain pillows without *corners poking into you* guys

Awesome Dragon Railing by Giuseppe Celeprin
No, Kevin, we’d need to buy a house with a spiral staircase.
Tags:
#dragon #love the decor fandom
The Edison : Steampunk Nigth Club in Los Angeles CA
This was my second home in LA T_T (
ok so I only went for birthdays, whenever I took people downtown and on Thursdays when my kid was with her dad cause they had $.35 cocktails for happy hour XD)Once I took a friend for Happy Hour and the fairy that serves the absinthe (she rolls around a cart with tiny bottles of absinthe cocktails) came out and saw me and said “I’ll be out in a few, ok?” and went back to load the cart. my friend was like, “Um… how often to you come here??”
i am legit jealous
Tags:
#steampunk #alcohol #pretty things

Our class has the best Christmas tree.
oh my god it’s our chemistree
BLESS
But of the tree of the laboratory, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely have a really bad time
Tags:
#Christmas #chemistree #puns
When I first began living on my own, I didn’t really have any furniture. I started with an IKEA bed and a hand-me-down dresser; from there, I added wobbly particle-board bookshelves and lumpy couches left behind by previous housemates. By the time I was getting ready to move into my current house, a year and a half ago, most of my furniture was, frankly, kind of crappy.
So I started scouring Craigslist, and checking the furniture section at the thrift store, and called in favors from a few friends who owned vans or SUVs. When I moved into my new place, I had ditched most of the old stuff and replaced it with better-made, better-looking vintage pieces, almost none of which cost more than $200 individually (and that was for a midcentury modern dining table with eight teak chairs). Since then, I’ve also swapped out most of my particle-board bookshelves for hardwood replacements. I still pick up nice pieces when I see them and the price is right— most recently, a glass-fronted cabinet ($25), a velvet settee ($300, which is more than I’d usually pay), and a coffee table/console/end table set ($100).
Actual furniture & art currently in my house.
There are a lot of reasons I prefer my current furnishings to the old ones. Well-made vintage pieces are sturdier, last longer, can better survive dis- and re-assembly, and (in my opinion, anyway) generally look nicer. I do still have a couple of Billy bookcases and a Lillesand bed, but I am also a human person under the age of 40 and living within 50 miles of an IKEA, so that’s kind of inevitable.
There’s one other good reason for buying vintage that gets overlooked. The furniture and other housewares I’ve bought secondhand will not lose value; in fact, should I ever resell them they will probably go for more than I paid.
Because here’s the thing: if I hit a rough patch, or an unexpected medical bill, or other major unplanned expense, I am probably not going to have to resort to hocking my laptop or my few pieces of good jewelry. I can sell my 1930s enamel-topped breakfast table (bought from Craigslist for $85; would resell for $200 easily), or my 1920s spool cabinet (bought from an estate sale for $25, would fetch $250+ at an antique store), or a few of the thrifted paintings off my walls. They are all lovely things that I enjoy owning very much, but I would be fine without them and I would find equivalent replacements eventually.
So: let’s say you want to start divesting yourself of particle board. How should you start? What should you look for? How much should you be willing to pay?
Tags:
#interesting