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BATERYA.COM

06 Jan, 2009

CEILING BOOKSHELF

I have already discussed how we could use a portions of the stairs to be stairs reading area.  Now I have found a way to make use of your ceiling or rafters.  The ceiling is the part of the house where 99.9% of people do not use or maximize.  Thanks to Apartmenttherapy,  I have found to use the ceiling as a bookshelf and safe a lot of space by doing it.  Nice idea isn’t it.  The ceiling bookshelf is an idea that can be applied quite easy. However, in order to get a book, you have to use a chair or ladder.   Just make sure to put the books properly so that it might not fall into your heads.  HEHE…

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Posted by: baterya In: DESIGN

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SIDE THOUGHTS

  • Love isn’t a fairytale, it isn’t perfect, and it doesn’t always come easy. But it is something that we should hold on to for the rest of our lives, because it’s the only thing that’s worth fighting for.

  • Hero: someone we admire. Someone we look up to. Someone who gives us hope. Not a myth, or an icon, or a legend- someone solid, genuine and real. An ordinary person who does extraordinary things. A hero picks us up when we are down. Believes in us before we believe in ourselves. Inspires us to expand and embrace what’s possible. Helps us realize that we can be heroes, too - Kobi Yamada

  • Devil’s Pool - a small lagoon, enclosed by rocks, on the edge of one of the biggest, most beautiful waterfalls in the world, Victoria Falls. Set on Livingstone Island, at a height of 103 meters, Devil’s Pool is definitely one of the most surreal locations on Earth

  • Enchanted Well or Poco Encantado.  Located in Chapada Diamantina National Park in Brazil.  - This giant sunken pool is 120 feet deep and the water is so transparent the rocks and ancient tree trunks are visible on the bottom. Access to this pond is highly controlled for environmental protection of its rare and delicate ecosystem.

  • I don’t believe in fate or destiny. I believe in various degrees of hatred, paranoia, and abandonment. However much of that gets heaped upon you doesn’t matter - it’s only a matter of how much you can take and what it does to you — Henry Rollins