A single box can cost €20,000!
Used by Degas, Monet, and even Winston Churchill.
La Maison du Pastel is the world’s oldest pastel maker.
Founded in 1720 and they still handcraft in Paris today.
ANTWERP’S 1531 TRADE HALL
Opened in 1531, Antwerp’s Handelsbeurs is often described as the world’s first purpose-built commodity exchange.
Merchants from across Europe once met here to trade, negotiate and build the financial networks of the early modern world. The building later inspired other exchange halls, including London’s Royal Exchange.
The Neo-Gothic interior seen today is not the original 16th-century structure. After major fires and rebuilding, the current hall was completed in the 19th century — abandoned after the stock exchange closed in 1997, then restored and brought back to life as an events venue.
📸 @ isabelle_van_assche
You watched this map take shape for months.
Now it exists in the room: pressed into paper,
edged in gold, stamped by hand, numbered.
Mercator never kept his maps.
He drew them so others could cross.
Pre-order in bio. Until July 12.
https://t.co/h0sKP1eRyP
You watched this map take shape for months.
Now it exists in the room: pressed into paper,
edged in gold, stamped by hand, numbered.
Mercator never kept his maps.
He drew them so others could cross.
Pre-order in bio. Until July 12.
https://t.co/h0sKP1eRyP
🎨🖌️🖼️
Hidden in a Parisian courtyard is La Maison du Pastel, the world's oldest pastel maker.
With a 300-year-old legacy of making pastels by hand, the shop served clients like Edgar Degas.
@MaisonPastelRP
France, this hidden gem in Grand Est is a monumental Gothic cathedral featuring over two thousand stone statues, a historic royal coronatior site, and spectacular thirteenth-century stained-glass windows.
After laying off 17 people from Warren Spector's Argos team two weeks ago, OtherSide has laid off another 18 people from Thick as Thieves team. Fewer than 10 people remain to maintain Thick as Thieves, and there are "currently no plans for the studio to work on any future games".
A VICTORIAN HOUSE ON WHEELS
This is the Neverwas Haul — a three-story, self-propelled mobile art vehicle built to look like a Victorian house.
Designed by Shannon O’Hare and built by a volunteer crew in Berkeley in 2006, it was originally created for Burning Man. The structure measures about 24 feet long, 24 feet high and 12 feet wide, and was made largely from recycled materials.
Part house, part vehicle, part steampunk fantasy — it turns architecture into something that can actually move.