#rosewood — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #rosewood, aggregated by home.social.
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Rosewood Castiglion del Bosco | Latest news https://www.diningandcooking.com/2425418/rosewood-castiglion-del-bosco-latest-news/ #area #bosco #Castiglion #chef #cuisine #del #garden #Hotel #Italia #Italian #ItalianRegionalCuisine #italiano #italy #RegionalCuisine #Rosewood #story
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Rosewood Castiglion del Bosco | Latest news https://www.diningandcooking.com/2425418/rosewood-castiglion-del-bosco-latest-news/ #area #bosco #Castiglion #chef #cuisine #del #garden #Hotel #Italia #Italian #ItalianRegionalCuisine #italiano #italy #RegionalCuisine #Rosewood #story
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We’re Not Disappearing — We’re the Foundation
By Keisa Stewart-Rucker | Head2Toe Magazine & Entertainment
Editor’s Note:
When extremist Nick Fuentes recently declared that “everyone wants Black people to disappear” and accused Black communities of causing “all the crime, especially in Chicago,” it reignited a familiar fire — the weaponization of false narratives to demean and dehumanize Black people. But at Head2Toe Magazine, we don’t shy away from truth. We confront it, expose it, and speak power to it. This piece isn’t just a rebuttal — it’s a reminder of who we are, what we’ve endured, and why we’re still here.Let’s passionately assert: Black people are not the problem; we are the undeniable backbone of this nation. America was brutally seized from Indigenous people and forged on the relentless strength of enslaved Africans. Our ancestors toiled on the land, picked the crops, built the railroads, cooked the meals, cared for the children, and fueled an economy that enriched others — all while being deprived of the very freedoms for which they worked so ceaselessly.
The Theft and the Truth
White men did not create America; they took it. They stole land, lives, and labor, then rewrote the history books to cast themselves as pioneers and heroes. The real story — the one they avoid — is that everything great about this country stands on a foundation laid by Black hands.
From inventions that changed the world to music that shaped its heartbeat, Black innovation is America’s hidden engine. Our art, our language, our rhythm, our style — they don’t just influence culture, they define it.
Inventions They Don’t Teach You About
For generations, America has benefited from Black brilliance while pretending it didn’t exist. The truth is, many of the tools and comforts we depend on daily were created or perfected by Black inventors whose names are too often left out of classrooms and history books.
Garrett Morgan — invented the traffic light and the gas mask, saving countless lives.
Lewis Latimer — developed the carbon filament that made Thomas Edison’s light bulb practical.
Madam C.J. Walker — created the first successful Black-owned haircare line and became the first self-made female millionaire in America.
Dr. Patricia Bath — invented the Laserphaco Probe, a device that revolutionized cataract surgery.
Granville T. Woods — known as “the Black Edison,” he held over 50 patents including for the telephone transmitter and railway telegraph system.
Sarah Boone — patented the modern ironing board design that made pressing clothes easier.
George Washington Carver — developed hundreds of uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans, advancing agriculture and sustainability.
Lonnie G. Johnson — NASA engineer and inventor of the Super Soaker, one of the most popular toys in history.
Marie Van Brittan Brown — invented the home security system, laying the foundation for today’s modern surveillance technology.These innovators — and thousands more — prove that Black genius is woven into every fabric of American progress. We didn’t just contribute; we created.
Destruction Out of Fear
Every time Black people built something powerful, it was met with violence.
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street — bombed and burned to ashes.
Rosewood, Florida — destroyed by mobs fueled by lies.
Seneca Village in New York — bulldozed to make room for Central Park.Each time, the pattern repeated: Black progress sparked white fear, and white fear birthed destruction. Yet somehow, we’re labeled the violent ones?
The Modern Lie
Today, the same narrative continues under new packaging — “Black people cause all the crime.” It’s a lazy, racist talking point designed to justify over-policing, underfunding, and mass incarceration. It ignores systemic poverty, generational trauma, and deliberate exclusion from opportunity. It refuses to acknowledge that when neighborhoods are stripped of resources, despair is often criminalized instead of healed.
But we know better. Statistics don’t define us — purpose does.
Chosen, Not Cursed
They hate us because they see the divine light within us — the truth that we are chosen. Despite centuries of oppression, we still rise, still create, still lead. From the church pews to the boardrooms, from the beauty salons to the tech labs, from the marching lines to the big screens — Black excellence is alive and unstoppable.
Our faith has always been our armor. What was meant to break us became the very thing that built us. Black people are the dream and the proof that you cannot erase what God has anointed.
We Are Not Disappearing
We are multiplying in brilliance, creativity, and strength. The world borrows our rhythm, our style, our resilience — yet denies us credit. But the truth stands tall: without us, there is no America.
So, to those who wish for our disappearance — keep watching. Because we’re not fading away; we’re taking our rightful place. We’re rebuilding what was torn down, reclaiming what was stolen, and redefining what it means to be powerful, purposeful, and free.
Blacks are not the problem.
We are the pulse.
We are the chosen people.
And we’re just getting started.#BlackExcellence #BlackInventors #BlackWallStreet #ChosenPeople #Head2ToeSpeaks #HistoryMatters #Rosewood #TruthOverHate #UnapologeticallyBlack #WeAreTheFoundation
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We’re Not Disappearing — We’re the Foundation
By Keisa Stewart-Rucker | Head2Toe Magazine & Entertainment
Editor’s Note:
When extremist Nick Fuentes recently declared that “everyone wants Black people to disappear” and accused Black communities of causing “all the crime, especially in Chicago,” it reignited a familiar fire — the weaponization of false narratives to demean and dehumanize Black people. But at Head2Toe Magazine, we don’t shy away from truth. We confront it, expose it, and speak power to it. This piece isn’t just a rebuttal — it’s a reminder of who we are, what we’ve endured, and why we’re still here.Let’s passionately assert: Black people are not the problem; we are the undeniable backbone of this nation. America was brutally seized from Indigenous people and forged on the relentless strength of enslaved Africans. Our ancestors toiled on the land, picked the crops, built the railroads, cooked the meals, cared for the children, and fueled an economy that enriched others — all while being deprived of the very freedoms for which they worked so ceaselessly.
The Theft and the Truth
White men did not create America; they took it. They stole land, lives, and labor, then rewrote the history books to cast themselves as pioneers and heroes. The real story — the one they avoid — is that everything great about this country stands on a foundation laid by Black hands.
From inventions that changed the world to music that shaped its heartbeat, Black innovation is America’s hidden engine. Our art, our language, our rhythm, our style — they don’t just influence culture, they define it.
Inventions They Don’t Teach You About
For generations, America has benefited from Black brilliance while pretending it didn’t exist. The truth is, many of the tools and comforts we depend on daily were created or perfected by Black inventors whose names are too often left out of classrooms and history books.
Garrett Morgan — invented the traffic light and the gas mask, saving countless lives.
Lewis Latimer — developed the carbon filament that made Thomas Edison’s light bulb practical.
Madam C.J. Walker — created the first successful Black-owned haircare line and became the first self-made female millionaire in America.
Dr. Patricia Bath — invented the Laserphaco Probe, a device that revolutionized cataract surgery.
Granville T. Woods — known as “the Black Edison,” he held over 50 patents including for the telephone transmitter and railway telegraph system.
Sarah Boone — patented the modern ironing board design that made pressing clothes easier.
George Washington Carver — developed hundreds of uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans, advancing agriculture and sustainability.
Lonnie G. Johnson — NASA engineer and inventor of the Super Soaker, one of the most popular toys in history.
Marie Van Brittan Brown — invented the home security system, laying the foundation for today’s modern surveillance technology.These innovators — and thousands more — prove that Black genius is woven into every fabric of American progress. We didn’t just contribute; we created.
Destruction Out of Fear
Every time Black people built something powerful, it was met with violence.
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street — bombed and burned to ashes.
Rosewood, Florida — destroyed by mobs fueled by lies.
Seneca Village in New York — bulldozed to make room for Central Park.Each time, the pattern repeated: Black progress sparked white fear, and white fear birthed destruction. Yet somehow, we’re labeled the violent ones?
The Modern Lie
Today, the same narrative continues under new packaging — “Black people cause all the crime.” It’s a lazy, racist talking point designed to justify over-policing, underfunding, and mass incarceration. It ignores systemic poverty, generational trauma, and deliberate exclusion from opportunity. It refuses to acknowledge that when neighborhoods are stripped of resources, despair is often criminalized instead of healed.
But we know better. Statistics don’t define us — purpose does.
Chosen, Not Cursed
They hate us because they see the divine light within us — the truth that we are chosen. Despite centuries of oppression, we still rise, still create, still lead. From the church pews to the boardrooms, from the beauty salons to the tech labs, from the marching lines to the big screens — Black excellence is alive and unstoppable.
Our faith has always been our armor. What was meant to break us became the very thing that built us. Black people are the dream and the proof that you cannot erase what God has anointed.
We Are Not Disappearing
We are multiplying in brilliance, creativity, and strength. The world borrows our rhythm, our style, our resilience — yet denies us credit. But the truth stands tall: without us, there is no America.
So, to those who wish for our disappearance — keep watching. Because we’re not fading away; we’re taking our rightful place. We’re rebuilding what was torn down, reclaiming what was stolen, and redefining what it means to be powerful, purposeful, and free.
Blacks are not the problem.
We are the pulse.
We are the chosen people.
And we’re just getting started.#BlackExcellence #BlackInventors #BlackWallStreet #ChosenPeople #Head2ToeSpeaks #HistoryMatters #Rosewood #TruthOverHate #UnapologeticallyBlack #WeAreTheFoundation
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We’re Not Disappearing — We’re the Foundation
By Keisa Stewart-Rucker | Head2Toe Magazine & Entertainment
Editor’s Note:
When extremist Nick Fuentes recently declared that “everyone wants Black people to disappear” and accused Black communities of causing “all the crime, especially in Chicago,” it reignited a familiar fire — the weaponization of false narratives to demean and dehumanize Black people. But at Head2Toe Magazine, we don’t shy away from truth. We confront it, expose it, and speak power to it. This piece isn’t just a rebuttal — it’s a reminder of who we are, what we’ve endured, and why we’re still here.Let’s passionately assert: Black people are not the problem; we are the undeniable backbone of this nation. America was brutally seized from Indigenous people and forged on the relentless strength of enslaved Africans. Our ancestors toiled on the land, picked the crops, built the railroads, cooked the meals, cared for the children, and fueled an economy that enriched others — all while being deprived of the very freedoms for which they worked so ceaselessly.
The Theft and the Truth
White men did not create America; they took it. They stole land, lives, and labor, then rewrote the history books to cast themselves as pioneers and heroes. The real story — the one they avoid — is that everything great about this country stands on a foundation laid by Black hands.
From inventions that changed the world to music that shaped its heartbeat, Black innovation is America’s hidden engine. Our art, our language, our rhythm, our style — they don’t just influence culture, they define it.
Inventions They Don’t Teach You About
For generations, America has benefited from Black brilliance while pretending it didn’t exist. The truth is, many of the tools and comforts we depend on daily were created or perfected by Black inventors whose names are too often left out of classrooms and history books.
Garrett Morgan — invented the traffic light and the gas mask, saving countless lives.
Lewis Latimer — developed the carbon filament that made Thomas Edison’s light bulb practical.
Madam C.J. Walker — created the first successful Black-owned haircare line and became the first self-made female millionaire in America.
Dr. Patricia Bath — invented the Laserphaco Probe, a device that revolutionized cataract surgery.
Granville T. Woods — known as “the Black Edison,” he held over 50 patents including for the telephone transmitter and railway telegraph system.
Sarah Boone — patented the modern ironing board design that made pressing clothes easier.
George Washington Carver — developed hundreds of uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans, advancing agriculture and sustainability.
Lonnie G. Johnson — NASA engineer and inventor of the Super Soaker, one of the most popular toys in history.
Marie Van Brittan Brown — invented the home security system, laying the foundation for today’s modern surveillance technology.These innovators — and thousands more — prove that Black genius is woven into every fabric of American progress. We didn’t just contribute; we created.
Destruction Out of Fear
Every time Black people built something powerful, it was met with violence.
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street — bombed and burned to ashes.
Rosewood, Florida — destroyed by mobs fueled by lies.
Seneca Village in New York — bulldozed to make room for Central Park.Each time, the pattern repeated: Black progress sparked white fear, and white fear birthed destruction. Yet somehow, we’re labeled the violent ones?
The Modern Lie
Today, the same narrative continues under new packaging — “Black people cause all the crime.” It’s a lazy, racist talking point designed to justify over-policing, underfunding, and mass incarceration. It ignores systemic poverty, generational trauma, and deliberate exclusion from opportunity. It refuses to acknowledge that when neighborhoods are stripped of resources, despair is often criminalized instead of healed.
But we know better. Statistics don’t define us — purpose does.
Chosen, Not Cursed
They hate us because they see the divine light within us — the truth that we are chosen. Despite centuries of oppression, we still rise, still create, still lead. From the church pews to the boardrooms, from the beauty salons to the tech labs, from the marching lines to the big screens — Black excellence is alive and unstoppable.
Our faith has always been our armor. What was meant to break us became the very thing that built us. Black people are the dream and the proof that you cannot erase what God has anointed.
We Are Not Disappearing
We are multiplying in brilliance, creativity, and strength. The world borrows our rhythm, our style, our resilience — yet denies us credit. But the truth stands tall: without us, there is no America.
So, to those who wish for our disappearance — keep watching. Because we’re not fading away; we’re taking our rightful place. We’re rebuilding what was torn down, reclaiming what was stolen, and redefining what it means to be powerful, purposeful, and free.
Blacks are not the problem.
We are the pulse.
We are the chosen people.
And we’re just getting started.#BlackExcellence #BlackInventors #BlackWallStreet #ChosenPeople #Head2ToeSpeaks #HistoryMatters #Rosewood #TruthOverHate #UnapologeticallyBlack #WeAreTheFoundation
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We’re Not Disappearing — We’re the Foundation
By Keisa Stewart-Rucker | Head2Toe Magazine & Entertainment
Editor’s Note:
When extremist Nick Fuentes recently declared that “everyone wants Black people to disappear” and accused Black communities of causing “all the crime, especially in Chicago,” it reignited a familiar fire — the weaponization of false narratives to demean and dehumanize Black people. But at Head2Toe Magazine, we don’t shy away from truth. We confront it, expose it, and speak power to it. This piece isn’t just a rebuttal — it’s a reminder of who we are, what we’ve endured, and why we’re still here.Let’s passionately assert: Black people are not the problem; we are the undeniable backbone of this nation. America was brutally seized from Indigenous people and forged on the relentless strength of enslaved Africans. Our ancestors toiled on the land, picked the crops, built the railroads, cooked the meals, cared for the children, and fueled an economy that enriched others — all while being deprived of the very freedoms for which they worked so ceaselessly.
The Theft and the Truth
White men did not create America; they took it. They stole land, lives, and labor, then rewrote the history books to cast themselves as pioneers and heroes. The real story — the one they avoid — is that everything great about this country stands on a foundation laid by Black hands.
From inventions that changed the world to music that shaped its heartbeat, Black innovation is America’s hidden engine. Our art, our language, our rhythm, our style — they don’t just influence culture, they define it.
Inventions They Don’t Teach You About
For generations, America has benefited from Black brilliance while pretending it didn’t exist. The truth is, many of the tools and comforts we depend on daily were created or perfected by Black inventors whose names are too often left out of classrooms and history books.
Garrett Morgan — invented the traffic light and the gas mask, saving countless lives.
Lewis Latimer — developed the carbon filament that made Thomas Edison’s light bulb practical.
Madam C.J. Walker — created the first successful Black-owned haircare line and became the first self-made female millionaire in America.
Dr. Patricia Bath — invented the Laserphaco Probe, a device that revolutionized cataract surgery.
Granville T. Woods — known as “the Black Edison,” he held over 50 patents including for the telephone transmitter and railway telegraph system.
Sarah Boone — patented the modern ironing board design that made pressing clothes easier.
George Washington Carver — developed hundreds of uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans, advancing agriculture and sustainability.
Lonnie G. Johnson — NASA engineer and inventor of the Super Soaker, one of the most popular toys in history.
Marie Van Brittan Brown — invented the home security system, laying the foundation for today’s modern surveillance technology.These innovators — and thousands more — prove that Black genius is woven into every fabric of American progress. We didn’t just contribute; we created.
Destruction Out of Fear
Every time Black people built something powerful, it was met with violence.
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street — bombed and burned to ashes.
Rosewood, Florida — destroyed by mobs fueled by lies.
Seneca Village in New York — bulldozed to make room for Central Park.Each time, the pattern repeated: Black progress sparked white fear, and white fear birthed destruction. Yet somehow, we’re labeled the violent ones?
The Modern Lie
Today, the same narrative continues under new packaging — “Black people cause all the crime.” It’s a lazy, racist talking point designed to justify over-policing, underfunding, and mass incarceration. It ignores systemic poverty, generational trauma, and deliberate exclusion from opportunity. It refuses to acknowledge that when neighborhoods are stripped of resources, despair is often criminalized instead of healed.
But we know better. Statistics don’t define us — purpose does.
Chosen, Not Cursed
They hate us because they see the divine light within us — the truth that we are chosen. Despite centuries of oppression, we still rise, still create, still lead. From the church pews to the boardrooms, from the beauty salons to the tech labs, from the marching lines to the big screens — Black excellence is alive and unstoppable.
Our faith has always been our armor. What was meant to break us became the very thing that built us. Black people are the dream and the proof that you cannot erase what God has anointed.
We Are Not Disappearing
We are multiplying in brilliance, creativity, and strength. The world borrows our rhythm, our style, our resilience — yet denies us credit. But the truth stands tall: without us, there is no America.
So, to those who wish for our disappearance — keep watching. Because we’re not fading away; we’re taking our rightful place. We’re rebuilding what was torn down, reclaiming what was stolen, and redefining what it means to be powerful, purposeful, and free.
Blacks are not the problem.
We are the pulse.
We are the chosen people.
And we’re just getting started.#BlackExcellence #BlackInventors #BlackWallStreet #ChosenPeople #Head2ToeSpeaks #HistoryMatters #Rosewood #TruthOverHate #UnapologeticallyBlack #WeAreTheFoundation
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We’re Not Disappearing — We’re the Foundation
By Keisa Stewart-Rucker | Head2Toe Magazine & Entertainment
Editor’s Note:
When extremist Nick Fuentes recently declared that “everyone wants Black people to disappear” and accused Black communities of causing “all the crime, especially in Chicago,” it reignited a familiar fire — the weaponization of false narratives to demean and dehumanize Black people. But at Head2Toe Magazine, we don’t shy away from truth. We confront it, expose it, and speak power to it. This piece isn’t just a rebuttal — it’s a reminder of who we are, what we’ve endured, and why we’re still here.Let’s passionately assert: Black people are not the problem; we are the undeniable backbone of this nation. America was brutally seized from Indigenous people and forged on the relentless strength of enslaved Africans. Our ancestors toiled on the land, picked the crops, built the railroads, cooked the meals, cared for the children, and fueled an economy that enriched others — all while being deprived of the very freedoms for which they worked so ceaselessly.
The Theft and the Truth
White men did not create America; they took it. They stole land, lives, and labor, then rewrote the history books to cast themselves as pioneers and heroes. The real story — the one they avoid — is that everything great about this country stands on a foundation laid by Black hands.
From inventions that changed the world to music that shaped its heartbeat, Black innovation is America’s hidden engine. Our art, our language, our rhythm, our style — they don’t just influence culture, they define it.
Inventions They Don’t Teach You About
For generations, America has benefited from Black brilliance while pretending it didn’t exist. The truth is, many of the tools and comforts we depend on daily were created or perfected by Black inventors whose names are too often left out of classrooms and history books.
Garrett Morgan — invented the traffic light and the gas mask, saving countless lives.
Lewis Latimer — developed the carbon filament that made Thomas Edison’s light bulb practical.
Madam C.J. Walker — created the first successful Black-owned haircare line and became the first self-made female millionaire in America.
Dr. Patricia Bath — invented the Laserphaco Probe, a device that revolutionized cataract surgery.
Granville T. Woods — known as “the Black Edison,” he held over 50 patents including for the telephone transmitter and railway telegraph system.
Sarah Boone — patented the modern ironing board design that made pressing clothes easier.
George Washington Carver — developed hundreds of uses for peanuts, sweet potatoes, and soybeans, advancing agriculture and sustainability.
Lonnie G. Johnson — NASA engineer and inventor of the Super Soaker, one of the most popular toys in history.
Marie Van Brittan Brown — invented the home security system, laying the foundation for today’s modern surveillance technology.These innovators — and thousands more — prove that Black genius is woven into every fabric of American progress. We didn’t just contribute; we created.
Destruction Out of Fear
Every time Black people built something powerful, it was met with violence.
Tulsa’s Black Wall Street — bombed and burned to ashes.
Rosewood, Florida — destroyed by mobs fueled by lies.
Seneca Village in New York — bulldozed to make room for Central Park.Each time, the pattern repeated: Black progress sparked white fear, and white fear birthed destruction. Yet somehow, we’re labeled the violent ones?
The Modern Lie
Today, the same narrative continues under new packaging — “Black people cause all the crime.” It’s a lazy, racist talking point designed to justify over-policing, underfunding, and mass incarceration. It ignores systemic poverty, generational trauma, and deliberate exclusion from opportunity. It refuses to acknowledge that when neighborhoods are stripped of resources, despair is often criminalized instead of healed.
But we know better. Statistics don’t define us — purpose does.
Chosen, Not Cursed
They hate us because they see the divine light within us — the truth that we are chosen. Despite centuries of oppression, we still rise, still create, still lead. From the church pews to the boardrooms, from the beauty salons to the tech labs, from the marching lines to the big screens — Black excellence is alive and unstoppable.
Our faith has always been our armor. What was meant to break us became the very thing that built us. Black people are the dream and the proof that you cannot erase what God has anointed.
We Are Not Disappearing
We are multiplying in brilliance, creativity, and strength. The world borrows our rhythm, our style, our resilience — yet denies us credit. But the truth stands tall: without us, there is no America.
So, to those who wish for our disappearance — keep watching. Because we’re not fading away; we’re taking our rightful place. We’re rebuilding what was torn down, reclaiming what was stolen, and redefining what it means to be powerful, purposeful, and free.
Blacks are not the problem.
We are the pulse.
We are the chosen people.
And we’re just getting started.#BlackExcellence #BlackInventors #BlackWallStreet #ChosenPeople #Head2ToeSpeaks #HistoryMatters #Rosewood #TruthOverHate #UnapologeticallyBlack #WeAreTheFoundation
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The Best New Hotels, Restaurants And Exhibitions In London Right Now
Lilibet’s is on the site of HM Queen Elizabeth II’s birthplace in Mayfair Claire Menary Mayfair’s Newest Luxury…
#London #UnitedKingdom #UK #GB #England #Headlines #News #Europe #EU #Britain #Claridge’s #Exhibitions #GreatBritain #hotel #london #luxury #MarieAntoinette #Mayfair #newman #Restaurants #rosewood
https://www.europesays.com/uk/450719/ -
https://www.europesays.com/uk/450719/ The Best New Hotels, Restaurants And Exhibitions In London Right Now #Britain #Claridge’s #England #Exhibitions #GreatBritain #hotel #london #luxury #MarieAntoinette #Mayfair #newman #Restaurants #rosewood #UK #UnitedKingdom
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The Rosewood São Paulo: Excellence and the Disney Effect
First of all, the Rosewood is a gorgeous facility, centrally located in São Paulo and yet somehow an oasis of sorts. Two blocks from the main drag (Av. Paulista), as soon as you enter the driveway you enter a different world, lush and green like the jungle. Having an oasis to retreat to from the chaotic third world aspects of São Paulo is a necessity when you are old and spoiled. 344 is a luxury king category that is almost sufficient for several days. The best aspect is a balcony that […]https://noplasticshowers.com/2025/09/23/the-rosewood-sao-paulo-excellence-and-the-disney-effect/
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Celebrating Purple Heart Day.
#purpleheart #woodworking #purple #handmade #walnut #wood #hardwood #bloodwood #ebony #custom #maple #veterans #veteran #army #rosewood #purpleaesthetic #hardwoodrings #art #woodrings #santosrosewood #zebrawood #hardwoodring #cuttingboard #medik #interiordesign #selfcare #lavashellmassage #swedishmassage #complementarytherapist #nealsyardremedies Purple Heart Day is being celebrated today on 7th August. It is given to those American…
https://itsmostamazingindia.wordpress.com/2025/08/07/celebrating-purple-heart-day/
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Celebrating Purple Heart Day.
#purpleheart #woodworking #purple #handmade #walnut #wood #hardwood #bloodwood #ebony #custom #maple #veterans #veteran #army #rosewood #purpleaesthetic #hardwoodrings #art #woodrings #santosrosewood #zebrawood #hardwoodring #cuttingboard #medik #interiordesign #selfcare #lavashellmassage #swedishmassage #complementarytherapist #nealsyardremedies Purple Heart Day is being celebrated today on 7th August. It is given to those American…
https://itsmostamazingindia.wordpress.com/2025/08/07/celebrating-purple-heart-day/
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Celebrating Purple Heart Day.
#purpleheart #woodworking #purple #handmade #walnut #wood #hardwood #bloodwood #ebony #custom #maple #veterans #veteran #army #rosewood #purpleaesthetic #hardwoodrings #art #woodrings #santosrosewood #zebrawood #hardwoodring #cuttingboard #medik #interiordesign #selfcare #lavashellmassage #swedishmassage #complementarytherapist #nealsyardremedies Purple Heart Day is being celebrated today on 7th August. It is given to those American…
https://itsmostamazingindia.wordpress.com/2025/08/07/celebrating-purple-heart-day/
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Celebrating Purple Heart Day.
#purpleheart #woodworking #purple #handmade #walnut #wood #hardwood #bloodwood #ebony #custom #maple #veterans #veteran #army #rosewood #purpleaesthetic #hardwoodrings #art #woodrings #santosrosewood #zebrawood #hardwoodring #cuttingboard #medik #interiordesign #selfcare #lavashellmassage #swedishmassage #complementarytherapist #nealsyardremedies Purple Heart Day is being celebrated today on 7th August. It is given to those American…
https://itsmostamazingindia.wordpress.com/2025/08/07/celebrating-purple-heart-day/
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Greene & Greene sconce
Recycled sapele mahogany with rosewood inlays.
30cm x 17 cm x 17cmWith the damaged/discarded leftovers of the bed in my previous post, I've made this small Greene & Greene style sconce.
Usually I hide the blemishes of the wood (old nail holes scratched surfaces etc) but not here. I incorporated them trying to mimic an old heavily used item.
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Mahogany Bed/Settee
I finished a bed I needed for my house in the country.
It's made out of recycled sapele mahogany and pieces of rosewood.Dimensions: 2 metres x 96cm x 70cm
#mahogany #sapele #sapelli #woodworking #furniture #settee #rosewood
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And here's the handle, along with the lil' foraging knife I made last year
#woodwork #knifemaking #hiddentangknife #rosewood #linseedoil #brasswork -
And here's the handle, along with the lil' foraging knife I made last year
#woodwork #knifemaking #hiddentangknife #rosewood #linseedoil #brasswork -
And here's the handle, along with the lil' foraging knife I made last year
#woodwork #knifemaking #hiddentangknife #rosewood #linseedoil #brasswork -
And here's the handle, along with the lil' foraging knife I made last year
#woodwork #knifemaking #hiddentangknife #rosewood #linseedoil #brasswork