This unmatched pair is just hanging out enjoying the flowers.
category:
Sleepable
comments:
12
Smart Set commented on 03.19.07
This one.
Rebecca commented on 09.06.03
If I meet that challenge it will be due to divine intervention.
DVD Dan commented on 09.06.03
Yes Frank You certainly did give this one their moment of fame. More matts and house numbers to come. Matching matt number with address though is an almost unsurmountable task. I'll get right on it.
Frank commented on 09.06.03
Untill yesterday, this was a totally unknown mattress, without any comment. I am so happy that I succeeded to save it from oblivion.
wim commented on 09.06.03
you are making it too easy for those across the ocean
Salinger commented on 09.06.03
I would like to set our American friends a challenge of matching a house number in a streetmattress photograph with the same number on the mattress counter.
wim commented on 09.06.03
the numbering makes sens, on the houses, but on the sideboards it is a lot of work, probably not easy to maintain
Salinger commented on 09.06.03
a little. in England one might assume that there were at least 1,103 houses before this on the same side of the street.
DVD Dan commented on 09.05.03
We usually number by block (which is loosely between major cross streets). The first 2 or 3 digit denote the block number, the last digits denote the unit number. This block is numbered 2200 - 2299. If you drew a line east/west along the start of this block all addresses on that line would be 2200 (which corresponds in this case to a cross street named 22nd street, even though that street doesn't run the width of the city). Does that make any sense?
Rebecca commented on 09.05.03
That numbering system is typical of many neighborhoods, yes.
wim commented on 09.05.03
Do you always have the number on the house and on the sideboard? You must have very small people in California to paint at that height.
Frank commented on 09.05.03
It is a long way to be top of the list, A number 1, if this house is number 2208. What a long street.