3 Produkte
Long Room Trinity College Pin-Up
Normaler Preis €3.95High quality cardboard hanging sign
Photography © Liam Blake
This product has been produced using a high end printing process which results in excellent print colour reproduction.
Complete with hanging tag.
One of the greatest treasures of Trinity College Dublin, in addition to the Book of Kells, is the Old Library Building and in particular the Long Room. This is situated on the first floor of the Old Library – the location chosen by the designers over three hundred years ago so as to preserve the printed materials from the elements – and is a joy to behold. The room is the longest single-room library in Europe at 65 meters in length and contains over 200,000 of some of the oldest books in the library’s possession.
Irish Pub Signs Pin-Up
Normaler Preis €3.95High quality cardboard hanging sign
Photography © Liam Blake
This product has been produced using a high end printing process which results in excellent print colour reproduction.
Complete with hanging tag.
Colourful pub signs from around the island of Ireland.
Doors of Dublin Pin-Up
Normaler Preis €3.95High quality cardboard hanging sign
Photography © Liam Blake
This product has been produced using a high end printing process which results in excellent print colour reproduction.
Complete with hanging tag.
Many theories have been put forward to explain why they are so brightly painted and ornamented, none unfortunately likely to be true. It has been suggested, for instance, that the practice originated at the time of Elizabeth 1, when a Puritan administrator decreed that all the city’s door and window frames should be the same drab brown colour. In an act of the defiance, the artistic and expressive population responded by painting them in the brightest hues they could find. A similar story dates from reign of Queen Victoria in the late 1800’s. Some claim that after the death of her beloved husband Prince Albert, the grieving monarch ordered all the doors in Dublin painted black in his memory. Once again the rebellious Dubliners refused and turned their front doors into a riot of colour.
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