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Anchor
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Seinäjoki
Setúbal, street decoration IV - fish
Cabo Espichel III
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Fluid mechanics : Torricelli has to comply with Ne…
Torre do Bugio - 38° 39′ 37.79″ N, 9° 17′ 56.23″ W
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Many years ago - scanned from Kodachrome II
Setúbal Summer Street II
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Centro Cultural de Belém
Setúbal Summer Street decoration - I
Men at work
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She
Jovem Cegonha
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If you can, go for it !
Baboons in the wild.
Cork - sculpture
Sunset over lake Mustaselkä
To have or to have not your own Tea House
Man at work
Setúbal, street.
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Personas, lugares y estados de ánimo... / Persones, lieux et humeurs .... / People, places and moods ...
Personas, lugares y estados de ánimo... / Persones, lieux et humeurs .... / People, places and moods ...
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
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+9999 photos no limits, no restrictions, no conditions
Buildings - Bâtiments - Edificios - Edifici - Gebäude - Edifícios - Gebouwen - Budynki
Buildings - Bâtiments - Edificios - Edifici - Gebäude - Edifícios - Gebouwen - Budynki
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Windmill - The Finnish way


There are three types of windmills in Finland: post mills represent the oldest type; hollow post mills represent a type that dates back to the second half of the 18th century; and smock mills, which are called mamselli in Finland according to mademoiselles who wore the smocks, were also introduced in the late 18th century. Most of the surviving mills were built in the 19th century. According to Hirsjärvi & Wailes “smock mills were used by the manors; hollow post mills were built by the larger farmers, and post mills by smallholders”. All Finnish windmills are made of wood with one exception. Today most of them are painted with red earth paint, and indeed, this is known to have been the tradition since long at least in the western and central parts of the country.
Dimas Sequeira, Trudy Tuinstra, Hervé S., Christiane ♥.•*¨`*•✿ and 6 other people have particularly liked this photo
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