#pueblo
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wgm-beautiful-world · 1 year ago
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Beautiful town in Bavaria, GERMANY
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whyeverr · 30 days ago
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Pueblo Modern
The cool thing about pueblo homes is that they are a uniquely American architectural style (American as in the Americas — pueblo architecture predates colonization by nearly a millennia). The not-so-cool thing is that adobe is a really difficult building material to realistically recreate in game, and since Spanish Colonial Revival is one of the base game build mode styles, we're unlikely to see this explored in greater depth in a future pack. Still, when I resigned myself to building a (sigh) modern home for this series, Pueblo Revival called to me, and not just because I needed something to stick in StrangerVille...
This Pueblo Revival home features (regrettably) concrete walls, decorative exposed vigas (wooden beams), and a central enclosed courtyard, connecting the formal living room to the dining room and providing filtered sunlight throughout the main floor. Traditional tile work is blended with modern finishes in the kitchen and throughout the home.
This home might be perfect for: high-ranking scientists working in the nearby secret lab, sims who host annual Christmas tamaladas
Lot details:
Lot Type: Residential (4 bed, 3 bath)
Price: §56,574
Size: 30x20
Location: Cliff Side Crest, StrangerVille
I’ve used from all packs freely here. As always, no CC!
Download links and floor plans below the cut 🎄
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Download via the Sims 4 Gallery or tray files via Sim File Share. You’re free to do whatever you want with the place but please don’t re-upload or share without credit. Thank you!
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henk-heijmans · 11 months ago
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Young woman in Pueblo window, ca. 1925 - by Forman Hanna (1882 - 1950), American
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pogphotoarchives · 26 days ago
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Girls with pottery, Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico
Photographer: T. Harmon Parkhurst
Date: ca. 1935
Negative Number: 004727
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neuroconflictos · 2 months ago
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Estar a su lado era como estar en un pueblo muy alegre, lleno de cerezos, mientras veías su sonrisa.
Denuczi
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archaeoart · 1 year ago
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Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, circa 1880.
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y-love-gothic · 9 months ago
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evan-collins90 · 1 year ago
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Home of the artist/designer Tavlos - Santa Fe, NM (1990s)
A 'postmodern southwestern' take on Pueblo architecture and indigenous art -- elements of styles we study like Whimsicraft & Earthy Southwestern.
Scanned from the book, 'In Artists' Homes: The Living Spaces of Contemporary Artists' (1992)
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rosechata · 2 months ago
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downtown santa fe
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wandering-jana · 2 months ago
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Delmarva Fox Squirrel, a subspecies of the fox squirrel located in coastal Virginia and Maryland.
Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge, Virgina
2021
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▪︎ Owl.
Place of origin: North America, United States, New Mexico, Zuni Pueblo (?), Colorado Plateau
Culture: Zuni, Native American
Date: ca. 1880
Medium: Ceramic with polychrome slip
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wgm-beautiful-world · 9 days ago
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Die Bremer Stadtmusikanten - DEUTSCHLAND
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keepingitneutral · 2 years ago
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Casa TOME, Puebla, Mexico,
MXTAD Architects,
Photography: Amy Bello
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20thcenturypaintings · 7 days ago
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Ready for the Fiesta
Artist: William Penhallow Henderson (American, 1877–1943)
Date: 1920
Medium: Oil on cardboard
Collection: Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States
Description
William Penhallow Henderson first visited Santa Fe, New Mexico, as early as the 1880s and made a painting trip to the Southwest in 1904; he relocated to Santa Fe permanently in 1916. Like Victor Higgins and Walter Ufer, Henderson enjoyed the financial support of Chicago industrialists. Unlike his two colleagues, however, Henderson was rejected by the Taos Society of Artists; in response, he formed a Modernist group, the New Mexico Painters, in 1923. Ready for the Fiesta displays Henderson’s reliance on strong, decorative shapes and color, and the flattened picture plane and intensified geometry of the design are a result of his time spent in France studying the work of Paul Cézanne.
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danskjavlarna · 3 months ago
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Source details and larger version.
Vintage Native American art.
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yoestuveaquiunavezfrases21 · 5 months ago
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2298- La mayoría nunca tiene razón.
(Henrik Johan Ibsen)
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