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— Buisness card
Amaretto Chip
— The Juice Bar
Met's Pete Alonso Threw Ball From Opponent's First M.L.B. Hit Into the Stands
— Article headline, The New York Times
Is your dog's name Lemonade?
— Lily to me in a voice after we walked past some kids at a lemonade stand
@germkoh has made many wonderful projects but I think my favourite is “Journal”, begun in 1995.
The following is Germaine description of the project taken from her website: “A terse personal journal appearing daily in the classified ads and, in more recent versions, on LED message boards and roadside signs."
— @micahlexier
By the time it was finished in 1899, the NYS Capitol was the most costly building ever constructed in the United States, and at 32 years, took longer to build than the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.
— Information plaque across the street from the New York State Capitol
When he couldn't get an appointment with Walt, he painted him a giant letter—twenty by twenty-four feet—in which he requested an interview and had it sent special delivery. Walt capitulated, granted him an interview, and then hired him a few days later.
— Neal Gabler, Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination
Model coal mine cart made of coal
— Object description in the Maude Abbott Medical Museum
I think it'd be funny if you set up an underwater TV in there and played a Christopher Nolan movie.
— Lily on the St. Lawrence tank in the Montreal Biodome
What looks like half a doctor? The other half of a doctor.
— Overheard joke told by a kid at Walt's Diner
So fish are like melons.
— Lily after Max said that birds spread fish eggs
But once again money was not his only or perhaps even greatest consideration. Walt harbored two impulses that often warred: the go-getting impulse to succeed, which could be certified by money and recognition, and the deeper psychological impulse to control, which could be satisfied only by making his films exactly as he wanted to make them without interference.
— Neal Gabler, Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination
Book of the week: Swimmers by Larry Sultan
— @johnmotoole
On display are the LEGO Unitron Crater Cruiser, LEGO Aquanaut Crystal Crawler, and LEGO Aquashark Barracuda Deep Sea Predator. These sets were put together by Sean Svadlenak, and they were left as he built them. He chose to have them be a collector's item instead of taking them apart and playing with the pieces separately.
— Item description, "LEGO in the 1990s," Johnson County Museum
Not exactly what you're looking for, but there's also a 1850 book that Google has scanned that typographically reproduces gravestones in the Pioneer Valley of MA called "Inscriptions on the Grave Stones in the Grave Yards of Northampton"
— @mollyrideout comment on @bibliophagist's post, "Can anybody out there point me to a paper or chapter about typographic representations of gravestones in early-ish American lit?"
With such a large collection, rather than capture a moment in time, you see history play out over time, you get depth, personality, tragity, victory, and extensive context.
— Nathan Raab, The Hunt for History
God damn it.
— J*
This is how I approached the most challenging element of the business: what gives something value.
— Nathan Raab, The Hunt for History
And this smuckers is just a prop. You don't have to use it, but feel free if you want to.
— Waiter at C As In Charlie on the "Charlie’s Deli Bagel" dessert
He is going to finish the Big Hike in 1920, and then he is going to settle down and write a book of everything and everybody he has seen—a "regular" book of travels. He has letters from churches, universities and schools to show that he has delivered some excellent lectures about people and customs of the earth. That is one way he manages to keep the wolf away.
— "Slav Is Walking To Write A Book," Arkansas Democrat, Wed, Sep 6, 1916