Ingleside Drive, Ingleside, Maryland.
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from China
seen from China

seen from Canada
seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
Ingleside Drive, Ingleside, Maryland.
Victoria's Secret, Holyoke Mall at Ingleside, Holyoke, MA [early to mid-1980s]
Apparently this was a prototype store design that Victoria's Secret never fully rolled out. It's a lot more reflective of the British Victorian era that the company had originally named itself after, but I guess for a time period that's typically associated with being prim, proper, and swaddled in petticoats, those images were at odds with all the sexy and scantily clad glamor that the business would later come to epitomize; and so they decided to go in more of the modern-posh direction that they've since been known for.
Source for photo [Pin: ε r i n n M a r i ε]
Source for info [Pin: Adam Godfrey]
Your accommodations, Mistress Clairière. Should there be aught else you require, pray inform myself or a member of the house staff, and it shall be attended to.
Guest suite at Fortemps Manor.
Ingleside Wing 1, Room #58 13th Ward, Empyreum Midgardsormor, Aether
I do not know if it is a crazy thought, you have to look at it as a headcanon obviously, but the friendship and relationship of Cole and Anne ... It makes me very parallel and similar to that of the Blythe brothers: Di and Walter.
And what comes? Starting with Cole's personality who, to be honest, this is how I see Walter; Anne and Gilbert's son has always been misunderstood, fascinated like his mother by the world of art (in his case, stories and writing poems). Being, in addition, a somewhat isolated child in his class because of his way of being, so dreamy and with that way so ... Of a book of speaking that he has. Walter is "insulted" by the other children by calling him gay. Susan does not like that Walter writes his poems and always tells Anne, always regrets that the boy has chosen that path. Walter is sweet and although he has a very good relationship with everyone in his family, the one with whom he feels understood the most is his sister Diana.
It's funny because Di and Nan should be much closer together, since they are twins after all ... But Anne makes it clear that the two sisters could not be more different from each other! In fact Nan is much more attached to Jem and as I have already mentioned, Di with Walter.
This is something that we also see throughout the books. With Di, Walter opens up, I feel like it's HIM. She is the ONLY person he shares his poems with. They have a lot of complicity with each other and it is something that Rilla also regrets.
In Rilla of Ingleside, Di and Walter go about sharing complicities, and it is a detail of what the little sister complained, because she also wanted to have that position with her brother Walter.
In the series, we see Cole and Anne's friendship grow in a precious way. Cole is passionate about art, which is why he also connects a lot with Anne. His sweetness and the way in which Anne is always there to help him feel integrated and in the end we see that she is the only one to whom he confides his secrets.
They are two pillars, both between them. As are Di and Walter.
..... I do not know if it could be a wink, and somehow the series could think that way but, I like to think that it IS
"Our sacrifice is greater than his," cried Rilla passionately. "Our boys give only themselves. We give them."
One of the best book I've ever read.
Ingleside Inn // Palm Springs
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco, CA - January 2019