You can write about anything your heart holds dear, no matter how esoteric or nerdy, and somewhere out there you'll connect with some kindred spirits who eagerly join in the nerd-fest right along with you. Best of all, those kindred spirits often hold clues to even more nerdy pieces of the puzzle. You're my Holmes, and I'm your Watson!
Holy Hina, Goddess of Rain! Not since Noah built the ark has there been such a downpour! Three stories tall? Maybe four stories! Aaauugghh! I'm flipping out.
Fantastic! If anyone can top this with evidence of a bigger or equally spectacular rain lamp, we need to hear about it.
Last week's outpouring of love for rain lamps and Monsanto's Fountain of Fashion at Disneyland inspired a veritable oil spill of responses.
Designer Mike Cozart salutes the FIBER FOUNTAIN (as it was named in the early designs) with some never-before-seen-by-me artwork on his amazing blog... including this fantastically rare blueprint:
See how the people in the vehicles (to show scale) are having a real hard time keeping their hands to themselves. The allure of dripping oil was impossible to resist, and the show designers knew this even before the fountain was built! Most thrilling of all was to learn that to access the fountain's interior display, you had to open a hatch in the ceiling and be lowered in like a jewel thief! How cool!
Blog-reader Fred commented that I had neglected to mention the "grandaddy of all rain fountains" - that of Southern California's Topanga Plaza in Woodland Hills (1964). I never saw this awesome fountain in person, but Major Pepperidge of "Gorillas Don't Blog" shares these photos:
Holy Hina, Goddess of Rain! Not since Noah built the ark has there been such a downpour! Three stories tall? Maybe four stories! Aaauugghh! I'm flipping out.
The Major writes:
I think these have the Monsanto versions beat (look at the entranced shoppers in the first photo!) as far as size goes, although they lack the cool "tornado" effect. My grandmother used to take us clothes shopping at that mall when I was in high school, so theoretically I would have seen this fountain - but I don't remember it at all.
Fantastic! If anyone can top this with evidence of a bigger or equally spectacular rain lamp, we need to hear about it.
Thanks to everyone wh0 wrote in to share memories and mutual affection for rain lamps, one of "Man's modern miracles" to rephrase the coin.