WHAT’S HOT NOW

GOPAL KRISHNA SAD SONGS 003

GOPAL KRISHNA SAD SONGS 002

GOPAL KRISHNA SAD SONGS 001

ಗುರುವಾರ ಕೇಳಿ ಶ್ರೀ ರಾಘವೇಂದ್ರ ರಕ್ಷಾ ಮಂತ್ರ

LIVE LIVE - The Car Festival Of Lord Jagannath | Rath Yatra | Puri, Odisha

Ad Code

Responsive Advertisement

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's.

LIVE - The Car Festival Of Lord Jagannath | Rath Yatra | Puri, Odisha)

PDF Life Edited

PDFLifeEdited - Free Online PDF Compression Tool

PDFLifeEdited

Compress and optimize your PDF files while preserving quality. Perfect for email, web, and storage.

Drag & Drop Your PDF Here

or click to browse files (PDF documents only)

Medium

Downscaling

Quality

Format

0 MB
Original Size
0 MB
Compressed Size
0%
Size Savings

Advertisement

Google AdSense Ad Unit

Ad Unit ID: YOUR_AD_UNIT_ID

Premium Features

Upgrade to Pro for Batch Processing

Unlock premium features

Fast Compression

Compress PDFs in seconds with our optimized algorithm

Secure & Private

All processing happens in your browser - no server uploads

Mobile Friendly

Works perfectly on all devices and screen sizes

High Quality

Maintain document quality while reducing file size

Optimize Your PDFs for Better Performance

PDF compression is essential for efficient document management. Large PDF files can be difficult to share via email, take up unnecessary storage space, and slow down website loading times. Our free online PDF compressor helps you reduce file size without compromising on quality, making your documents more accessible and easier to share.

Compressed PDFs improve your website's performance metrics, which are crucial for SEO. Search engines prioritize websites that offer excellent user experiences, and fast-loading pages are a key component of that. By using our tool, you can ensure your PDFs are optimized for both desktop and mobile viewing.

Our tool includes advanced image optimization options that allow you to reduce the size of images within your PDF documents. You can choose different compression levels, downscaling options, and output formats to achieve the perfect balance between file size and visual quality.

© 2025, Styler Theme. Made with passion by Mr. Gopal Krishna Varik. Distributed by SGK. All Rights Reserved.

» »Unlabelled » Take a virtual tour inside a 17th c. Dutch doll’s house

Last week, the Rijksmuseum opened a new exhibition, At Home in the 17th Century, an immersive look on the domestic life of the Dutch Golden Age. It consists of nine diorama-style galleries designed by artist Steef de Jong that allow visitors to experience life in the 17th century home progressing from morning to night.

The exhibition zooms in on the lives of a variety of people, such as the Boudaen Courten family from Zeeland province. Many items belonging to members of this family have survived, including gilded furniture, portraits and one very remarkable relic: a bladder stone retrieved in a major medical procedure. All these objects will be on view together for the first time in centuries. We also take a peek into the world of the Utrecht artist Joachim Wtewael. In 1628 he painted a portrait of his daughter Eva, seated at a table that still exists. The painting presents Eva as the epitome of the ideal housewife, with a sewing cushion on her lap and a prayer book on the table. This vision of her future unfortunately never became reality. She died seven years after the completion of the painting and never married. The painting will be on show together with the table and the matching linen cupboard.

The exhibition takes a multifaceted look at how people lived in the 17th century. Together with Archeologie West-Friesland, the curators have studied the contents of the 17th-century cesspit at the home of the mayor of Hoorn and his family, the Soncks. The cookware, the crockery and the food waste tell us the story of what was on the family dining table, offering detailed insights into their eating habits. Cesspits found on Vlooienburg island in Amsterdam, by contrast, reveal that Portuguese immigrants to the city brought with them their own earthenware, and their own flavours.

The Doll’s House of Petronella Oortman is the centerpiece of the exhibition. Created in the late 17th century into the early 18th (ca. 1686 – ca. 1710), the doll’s house was not a toy or playhouse. It had tiny dolls in it, most of them now lost, alas, but they were not for kids to play pretend with. It was a meticulously rendered miniature version of a wealthy home of the period. Every possible detail was included, from sewing scissors to wallpaper to books of real music.

To celebrate this masterpiece of miniaturization, the museum has created a masterpiece of digital experience: an online tour of the house guided by the voice of Helena Bonham Carter. The online exhibition brings you inside every room of the doll’s house. It’s like Fantastic Voyage only you’ve been shrunk to fit into an elegant 17th century Dutch interior instead of the body of an injured scientist. The art on the walls, the wood paneling, the cane chairs, the cushions, the door knobs, the 1cm teacups, the porcelain spittoons on the floor next to the game table with a backgammon round in progress, the books, a curio cabinet full of tiny shells, the fruit on the kitchen counter, the fully-stocked cellar hidden in a drawer, baskets of peat briquets to burn for cooking and heating, a working threaded spinning wheel, monogrammed linen napkins, everything is jaw-droppingly realistic rendering in detail. You can’t even tell it’s miniaturized when you’re inside the house.

After the introduction, you can click on individual rooms to navigate, or you can play the whole tour and go along for the ride with Helena Bonham Carter as your guide. I highly recommend the latter, because the planned route is smartly laid out with a consistent through-line and clear transitions.



* This article was originally published here

«
Next
Newer Post
»
Previous
Older Post

No comments: