Mobilier utilisé :
- Fauteuil en Cuir "California", par Kare Design
- Canapé "Beryl", par Zago
- Meuble TV "Wayne", chez Maison du Monde
- Tapis "Hania", chez Maison du Monde
- Lampadaire Industriel "Nilo", chez Maison du Monde
- Lampadaire "Misuto", chez AM PM
- Tables Basses Gigognes "Avril", chez Maison du Monde
- Bout de Canapé "Walford", chez la Redoute Intérieurs
- Coffre en Rotin "Clare", chez Made.com [RIP]
- Etagères en Métal Noir "Maxine", chez Made.com [RIP]
- Petit Meuble Noir "Ashton", chez Maison du Monde
- Petite Lampe "Olney", chez Made.com [RIP]
- Peinture Asiatique, chez Etsy
- Suspension Bambou Fogo, chez Vraiment Beau
- Table Ronde "Irina", par Artecosy
- Chaises "Mava", par Puntmobles
- Bibliothèque en Epicéa, par Interior's
- Suspension en Cuisine "Lincoln Globe Lantern", par Vaughan
- Papier Peint "Temple Grey", par Graham Brown
By the banks of Bayou Chenal, in a parish adjacent to Baton Rouge, a couple care for a unique homage to the Acadian and Creole lifestyles. Along a meandering Louisiana roadway, beyond a pathway of slender oak trees and past an age-old split-cypress fence, flourishes a garden.
Free range life
A punkah ceiling fan in the kitchen building of Maison Chenal wards off the flies.
The dovecote
A carved wardrobe and a tall Canadian buffet grace the space, adorned with baskets skillfully crafted by Native Americans in Louisiana and French pewter candlesticks.
French-style parterre garden
Photos via Garden & Gun. Photography by William Abranowicz.
French TV journalist having a hard time trying to get woman in the street to comment on Macron's latest speech yesterday
Protesters organised casserolades (aka banging on pots and pans) in front of city halls across the country at 8pm, when Macron was speaking, to symbolically drown out his voice. Later that evening, Macron was filmed singing a song with some 'random people' in a street in Paris, trying to show he can go out and meet people and have fun because protesters don't exist. The people he was singing with (members of a choir, some of whom are 'alt-right-leaning') were using a folk song app created by far-right activists that was criticised a few months ago for hosting a Spanish fascist anthem & Third Reich military marches.
The government's response was that the President "couldn't know the background of the people he met that night." Maybe if he wants to avoid being associated with the far-right (that's a big if, I know), Macron should keep in mind that with the kinds of strategies and positioning his government has adopted lately, people in the street who welcome him with open arms and are proud to be filmed with him have a higher than average likelihood of supporting fascism.