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On 28-2-2016 16:02, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> Thomas de Groot <tho### [at] degrootorg> wrote:
>> Sunday morning, while (almost) everybody is at the temple of Apollo.
>
> Are you going to eventually increase the number of windows on those houses?
>
>
No. The houses are oriented inwards around an atrium. Streets are for
moving around not for idly peep into you neighbours homes :-)
--
Thomas
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Thomas de Groot wrote on 28/02/2016 10.04:
> Sunday morning, while (almost) everybody is at the temple of Apollo.
>
A very pleasant scene. And I like a lot the trees.
;-)
Paolo
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On 29-2-2016 12:08, Paolo Gibellini wrote:
> Thomas de Groot wrote on 28/02/2016 10.04:
>> Sunday morning, while (almost) everybody is at the temple of Apollo.
>>
> A very pleasant scene. And I like a lot the trees.
> ;-)
Thank you Paolo. I am not yet satisfied with the trees. POVtree is
sometimes hard to control and get what you really want, but I am slowly
getting there.
--
Thomas
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Yes, I tried POV-Tree, too, but don't know how to get what I want: a
main stem, curved towards one side, and branches getting out on the
other side. In fact, there is such a tree right in front of my home. :-)
On 29.02.2016 07:15, Thomas de Groot wrote:
> On 29-2-2016 12:08, Paolo Gibellini wrote:
>> Thomas de Groot wrote on 28/02/2016 10.04:
>>> Sunday morning, while (almost) everybody is at the temple of Apollo.
>>>
>> A very pleasant scene. And I like a lot the trees.
>> ;-)
>
> Thank you Paolo. I am not yet satisfied with the trees. POVtree is
> sometimes hard to control and get what you really want, but I am slowly
> getting there.
>
>
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On 02/29/2016 09:07 AM, Sven Littkowski wrote:
> Yes, I tried POV-Tree, too, but don't know how to get what I want: a
> main stem, curved towards one side, and branches getting out on the
> other side. In fact, there is such a tree right in front of my home. :-)
>
Speaking of oddly shaped trees...
There used to be a a famous tree in my locality (Ventura, California) -- locally
famous only, of
course. It was a palm tree, the kind that has a very tall, bare trunk, with bushy
fronds only
at the top. It was damaged in a storm many years ago and the top broke and fell over
at a right
angle. It didn't die, but continued to grow -- upward. So it resembled this rough
ascii
representation:
_\|/_
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----
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Although this diagram doesn't show it, they did add a diagonal brace to support that
original
right-angle bend. The street where it was located became named Crooked Palm Drive.
Unfortunately, it didn't survive a more recent storm which broke the top completely.
But it was
a well-known local sight for something like 50-60 years.
-=- Larry -=-
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People who grow bonsai trees also intend to give weird, twisted, or
bizarre shapes to those special mini trees.
On 01.03.2016 05:21, Larry Hudson wrote:
> Speaking of oddly shaped trees...
> There used to be a a famous tree in my locality (Ventura, California) --
> locally famous only, of course. It was a palm tree, the kind that has a
> very tall, bare trunk, with bushy fronds only at the top. It was
> damaged in a storm many years ago and the top broke and fell over at a
> right angle. It didn't die, but continued to grow -- upward.
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Some bonsai tree photos...
On 01.03.2016 21:23, Sven Littkowski wrote:
> People who grow bonsai trees also intend to give weird, twisted, or
> bizarre shapes to those special mini trees.
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download '027.jpg' (151 KB)
Download '1114801_a35r2.jpg' (152 KB)
Download '11232718_10152876952459786_4521127001925772068_n.jpg' (64 KB)
Download '5474262207_752b60417e_o.jpg' (260 KB)
Download 'images.jpg' (9 KB)
Download 'images6.jpg' (11 KB)
Preview of image '027.jpg'
Preview of image '1114801_a35r2.jpg'
Preview of image '11232718_10152876952459786_4521127001925772068_n.jpg'
Preview of image '5474262207_752b60417e_o.jpg'
Preview of image 'images.jpg'
Preview of image 'images6.jpg'
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On 3/2/2016 2:26 AM, Sven Littkowski wrote:
> Some bonsai tree photos...
>
>
>
>
> On 01.03.2016 21:23, Sven Littkowski wrote:
>> People who grow bonsai trees also intend to give weird, twisted, or
>> bizarre shapes to those special mini trees.
Links would be a better option in povray.binaries.images than posting
photographs of plants.
--
Regards
Stephen
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Am 02.03.2016 um 07:25 schrieb Stephen:
> On 3/2/2016 2:26 AM, Sven Littkowski wrote:
>> Some bonsai tree photos...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 01.03.2016 21:23, Sven Littkowski wrote:
>>> People who grow bonsai trees also intend to give weird, twisted, or
>>> bizarre shapes to those special mini trees.
>
>
> Links would be a better option in povray.binaries.images than posting
> photographs of plants.
That depends on whether the poster owns the copyright to the photographs
or at least has a license to distribute them (in which case posting them
in povray.binaries.images is somewhat ok, although we do prefer rendered
images), or whether he just copied them from arbitrary sources on the
internet without checking the terms of license (in which case he should
_recall the post IMMEDIATELY_[*]).
[* In German Thunderbird that would be done via the menu item
"Nachricht->Beitrag zurückziehen".]
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On 3/2/2016 7:10 AM, clipka wrote:
> Am 02.03.2016 um 07:25 schrieb Stephen:
>> On 3/2/2016 2:26 AM, Sven Littkowski wrote:
>>> Some bonsai tree photos...
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 01.03.2016 21:23, Sven Littkowski wrote:
>>>> People who grow bonsai trees also intend to give weird, twisted, or
>>>> bizarre shapes to those special mini trees.
>>
>>
>> Links would be a better option in povray.binaries.images than posting
>> photographs of plants.
>
> That depends on whether the poster owns the copyright to the photographs
> or at least has a license to distribute them (in which case posting them
> in povray.binaries.images is somewhat ok, although we do prefer rendered
> images), or whether he just copied them from arbitrary sources on the
> internet without checking the terms of license (in which case he should
> _recall the post IMMEDIATELY_[*]).
>
I didn't even think of copyright reasons. Bad person that I am.
I was thinking more along the lines of. Everyone I know, knows what a
bonsai tree is. Why take up bandwidth and disk space?
I still remember the days of dial up. ;-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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