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/cgl/ - Cosplay & EGL

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>> No.10754961 [View]
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10754961

>>10754717
>that feels very bloodborne to me and i like that.

Yea. Very decorative wrought iron has that gothic vibe to it. It been popular few times trough 20th century but is currently mostly out of vogue so you can find many interesting pieces 2nd hand often for not that much. Especially more "gothic" looking as "normies" tend to see such pieces as "ugly" and put lower price tags on them. I have seen pair of standing candelabras looking like straight out of Elvira's show (you know, these standing behind shezlong she sits on) for funny small money sad I have nowhere to put them ATM.

>It's more for the outside of the house than inside but I feel like it has versatility. Good pick. What style is your decor?

Whatever landlord puts in what I rent pretty much. Empty unfurnished apartments for rent are rarity in my country and I am not yet buying anything of my own. Personally I'm mostly Art Deco fan but have some interests in neogothic and 19th/early20th wooden central/eastern European (Poland, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania) architecture that kinda reassembles USA wooden Queen Annie (a.k.a. Victorian) houses in level of ornamentation outside. But we had different plans of buildings (much simpler - absence of any round shapes, almost no "towers") and much simpler interiors - no English paneling inside, etc. Sadly a lot of that architecture is totally ruined nowadays. Picrel is an example of such style from Vilnus in Lithuania - it mixes elements of few wooden styles - Polish, Lithuanian and Belarusian with some distant inspirations. If you google "wooden architecture [eastern europe/baltics/belarus/latvia/lithuania etc] 19th century" you would find many examples of rich ornamentation of these styles. There is also kinda separate "Styl Zakopiański" (Zakopane style, Zakopane is a city in Polish Carpathians)

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