Ac Extras Part II Mini Set for The Sims 4
Hello everyone !!!!!
First of all, we want to apologize for being so quiet lately here, we are in the middle of two busy and complicated months, with study and work, not being able to immerse ourselves in the sims world for some time now.
BUT Anyway, running here and there… We got to complete this mini set, inspired by AC, with some lovely items and decorations that we hope you will enjoy as we do !!
We are also adding a few more items for next time too..
For now we have :
3 Types of pediments ( as wall decor )
Vintage classical door
Stone window ledge
Corinthian full columns ( small, medium and tall )
Corinthian half column ( small, medium and tall )
5 different georgian windows
Iron gilded balcony
Giant stone carved clock decor
ALL BASE GAME Compatible !!!
Have a great week our sims fellows and happy playing !!!!
Your team,
AnniQ&Stereo91 Studio
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A pleasant loaf. 🍞 1817. Source.
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I don’t know who needs to hear this today, but:
- arsenic dye was used to make multiple shades of green in the 18th/19th centuries
- green dyes without arsenic were also still in common use
- consumer outcry against arsenic dye started as early as the 1860s, with many manufacturers beginning to phase it out around that time due to customer demand
- arsenic – dyed clothing is not likely to do more to the wearer than cause a skin rash. The majority of deaths from exposure to the dye were caused by other, more concentrated sources, and/or among workers exposed to large quantities of the pigment on a daily basis rather than consumers
- IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO TELL IF A GREEN ANTIQUE GARMENT IS DYED WITH ARSENIC WITHOUT CHEMICAL TESTING. There is NO telltale quality visible to the naked eye that I am aware of
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Wentke (Gown)
Mid 18th Century
The Netherlands
Women in Hindeloopen, a town in the northern Netherlandish province of Friesland, traditionally wore this type of striking lightweight coat, called a wentke, on special occasions. Beginning in the mid-eighteenth century, wentkes were usually made of boldly patterned Indian chintzes, and contrary to the custom in the rest of Europe of confining chintz to casual and private occasions, residents of Hindeloopen elevated this exotic fabric to a formal status. The wentke was often worn with other garments of Indian cotton. (The MET)
Peabody Essex Museum (Object Number: 2012.22.15)
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Dancers of the Georgian National Ballet, 1988. Photographed by Julio Donoso.
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Exotic Woman with Peacock, 1943 by Lado Gudiashvili (Georgian, 1896--1980)
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Barford Park, Somerset.
Photographed by Freddie Ardley
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Birth certificate, 1794-1800, Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.
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Displeased. 1810. Source.
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