
This may just look like a plain old wood door but, I’m not sure if you can tell from the photo, it is gigantic. This door is almost twice the width of many doors I’ve seen. Very cool.

This may just look like a plain old wood door but, I’m not sure if you can tell from the photo, it is gigantic. This door is almost twice the width of many doors I’ve seen. Very cool.

Except for the bars on the first floor windows this house is just rocking with cool details.

I’ve seen this on a number of lightposts in the city and it stops me in my tracks everytime. I like the one eye open one eye closed look. Anyone know the story behind these?
Every now and then I forget just how funny the Onion newspaper can be. My faith was restored when I saw the April 3rd Edition.
You have to read the story titled Report: Nation’s Gentrified Neighborhoods Threatened by Aristocratization. It is hilarious and below is an excerpt:
“According to a report released Tuesday by the Brookings Institution, a Washington-based think tank, the recent influx of exceedingly affluent powder-wigged aristocrats into the nation’s gentrified urban areas is pushing out young white professionals, some of whom have lived in these neighborhoods for as many as seven years.”

I was one of those people who got a 30 year fixed loan back in the day when I could’ve got a 5 year ARM and “saved” a boat load of money a month. But I can be a conservative person and I suspected in the long run I’d be safer with a 30 year fixed. Now let me just say here that I truly find this housing crisis tragic. Reading the stories of how people got taken advantage of is heart breaking. I’m not talking about that. What I’m talking about is the gamblers. So you know where I’m going with this for the Friday Question of the Day – Who should the government bail out from the housing crisis? Banks, borrowers or both? Or neither?
“I remember April 4, 1968 as if it were this morning. I was kneeling in the makeshift on-deck circle in the alley behind my parent’s house in Northwest DC. It was opening day for what my friends and I dubbed the ABL- Alley Baseball League. It was a new year, a new spring. But some things hadn’t changed. Like Harold Talley’s fastball. It remained as mysterious as Mona Lisa’s smile.
Bat after bat made contact with the warm spring air. It was the bottom of the 7th, and my team-the 5th Street Maulers- were behind 3-1. But a rally was underway. Big Joe’s line drive eluded the second baseman’s glove for a double. The very powerful Greg Walker was in the batter’s box. The count was 3 balls, no strikes. I tried my best to strike an impassive, Willie Mays-like pose in the on-deck circle, but Diane Washington and her equally beautiful sister were standing to my immediate right. I thought my 12 year old heart would explode.
Just before Harold delivered the fateful pitch, my Mother threw open the backdoor and screamed to no one and everyone in particular, “They’ve shot Martin Luther King in Memphis!” Everything seemed to stop. Baseball. Spring itself. My selfish desires. My Mother remained on the back porch, staring. I placed my bat on the ground. Everyone-fans, players- gathered balls, gloves, jackets, and headed home.
When I got inside, I joined my parents in front of the TV. He rolled his eyes upon hearing that the FBI had conducted an internal investigation, and concluded that they were not involved in what was now an assassination. My Mother began crying. There were reports of arson and looting in downtown DC, and in several cities across the country.
About an hour later, my Father and I stood on the roof of our house. Looking South, you could see thick, dark smoke through the still bare trees. 14th Street, 7th Street, H Street, Northeast- America itself, was on fire.
Sirens cried all night. My Mom did, too.”

Not sure if you can tell from the photo but it looks like the top row each gets its own individual roof deck. So which do you think would be better to get your own individual small portion of the roof fenced off or would you rather share a non divided larger open roof deck?

I never realized but this one has a mail slot by the floor as well. I see there is a newer mailbox to the left but why do you think originally they put the mail slots so far down on the door?

I think it is a wicked old school fireman. You probably have to be a fireman to put one of those decorations up though, don’t you think?

I like the stained glass but I’m not sure if I dig the white thing above it. Maybe a little bit too much together, yeah?