⌠spring in the city âŚ
@sweet-harmony

#batman#dc comics#bruce wayne#tim drake#dc#batfam#dick grayson#dc fanart#batfamily

seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Czechia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from TĂźrkiye

seen from Australia
seen from Egypt

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from Canada
⌠spring in the city âŚ
@sweet-harmony

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
One of my most beloved pieces in my Disney comics collection isn't even a Disney comic.
Ma quanto è buono il caffè con la menta del Pedrocchi đâ
By Costanza Beltrami
The Caffè Pedrocchi in Padua was inaugurated on 9 June 1831. It has long been the centef of Paduaâs public and intellectual life, visited by eminent artists and revolutionaries. Its unusual and eclectic architecture turns it into an unmissable urban landmark.
The Caffè was designed by Giuseppe Jappelli, an architect and landscape architect born in Venice in 1783. After studying at the lively Accademia Clementina in Bologna, he became a skilled map-maker and surveyor in the studio of Giovanni Valle in Padua. Having settled in the city, he took on several civic roles such as engineer for the Royal Office of Canals and Roads. Thanks to these positions he became an expert of landscape design, as he brilliantly demonstrated on 20 December 1815, when he turned the great hall of Paduaâs Palazzo della Ragione into a âromantic gardenâ for the visit of Francis I Emperor of Austria and his is consort, Maria Lodovica (1787â1816). Jappelliâs âromantic gardensâ were whimsical places at the boundary between nature and theatre: one at Valmarana, near Padua, contained an artificial hill, a lake, and even a grotto with papier-mâchĂŠ stalactites. The best-known feature of the Valmarana garden was its Gothic Revival Chapel, the imitation of a medieval Templar Chapel, completed in 1833. Projects such as this park turned Jappelli into a famous, well-established architect.
In 1826, Jappelli was commissioned the construction of the Caffè Pedrocchi by its owner, Antonio Pedrocchi, described by famous Romantic writer Stendhal as âItalyâs best restaurateur.â Completed between 1831 and 1842, the Caffè building is striking in its grandeur. Jappelliâs exploited the irregular shape of the site by designing a building bookended by loggias in the Greek Revival style. The upper floor, inaugurated on 16 September 1842, was envisaged as a set of prestigious private entertainment rooms, each decorated in a different historicizing style: for example, the Etruscan, Egyptian or Empire rooms. Jappelli also designed the Caffèâs furniture, from lamps to coffee machines. In 1837-9 the Caffè was expanded with the construction of a Gothic Revival structure, the Pedrocchino, dedicated to the offelleria or pastry shop. Today, the lower floor of the Caffè still functions as a coffee shop. Following a time-honored tradition, University of Padua students who pass an exam with the highest grade are offered an aperitivo on the house. The upper floor is now part of Paduaâs Museo del Risorgimento.
Between the completion of the structure in 1839 and his death in 1852, Jappelli was mainly involved in the construction of English-style parks and garden, inspired not only by his knack for garden design but also by several trips to Scotland and Great Britain as a whole.
 Reference: Barbara Mazza. "Jappelli, Giuseppe." Grove Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed June 8, 2017, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T044427.
The façade of the Caffè. Photo: ePadova
The north west loggia. Photo: Geobia on Wikimedia Commons.
The Pedrocchino. Photo: Alain Rouiller on Wikimedia Commons.
The Red Room, Caffè Pedrocchi. Orric on Wikimedia Commons.
"It was in Padua that I began to see Venetian life, with the ladies sitting in the cafes. The excellent restaurateur Pedrocchi, the best in Italy." ~ Stendhal
@sweet-harmony

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
âŚit was the early 19th century when Antonio Pedrocchi, a renowned coffee maker from Bergamo, began dreaming of a monumental cafĂŠ, architecturally iconic yet functional, located right in the heart of Padua. His desire was clear: "It had to be the most beautiful cafĂŠ in the world." Having inherited his father's cafĂŠ, Antonio Pedrocchi commissioned Venetian architect Giuseppe Jappelli to design the building, imbuing it with a unique and elegant atmosphere⌠and this is precisely the impression you get when admiring the frescoed interiors or even just from the small square overlooking the Pedrocchi⌠the two lions stand guardâŚ
@sweet-harmony
âŚone of the stone lions of the Caffè Pedrocchi and the pedestrian street that runs alongside this historic two-story building⌠where many conferences are heldâŚ
@sweet-harmony
It's late at night, but, random thought. Who was the most symbolic (not best, I value consistency and frequency too) writer (as of now I'm thinking about italians, but who wants to borrow the template can do whatever) by decade?
30s: Pedrocchi
40s: Martina
50s: Martina
60s: Scarpa
70s:
80s:
90s:
00s: Casty
10s: Artibani
20s: Nucci
I'm leaving sone spots, because I'm sleepy, but I'll come back to those.