
Joanna Maclennan
Articles
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2 months ago |
cabanamagazine.com | Joanna Maclennan
POSTCARD FROM | CABANA TRAVEL | WORLD OF CABANABY JOANNA MACLENNAN | CABANA TRAVEL | 30 JANUARY 2025Chefchaouen, more commonly known as the 'Blue City' © Joanna Maclennan It’s been 32 years since I've been to Tangier, and I arrived exactly the same way I did then; by boat from Tarifa. Only then it was summer and we were standing outside on the boat deck waiting to arrive at an unknown continent. I remember it being a lot more rustic.
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Jan 24, 2025 |
cabanamagazine.com | Joanna Maclennan
PLACES & SPACES | ROOMS & GARDENS | WORLD OF CABANABY JOANNA MACLENNAN | ROOMS & GARDENS | 24 JANUARY 2025A richly-detailed bedroom at Casapiane, Bordeaux © Joanna Maclennon. There are often places that we walk past, where we wonder what goes on behind those closed doors. Are they empty, abandoned or is someone still living there? A faint light or just the play of sunshine on the window makes us wonder what is inside, and what stories that place could tell.
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Sep 9, 2024 |
worldofinteriors.com | Joanna Maclennan
Long ago the Celts were considered barbarians. Indeed, the Roman name itself – galli – meant just that. But in the first century BC, the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus described the people who were pushed by the Romans out to the fringes of Britain and France’s northwestern peninsula as dressing flamboyantly. If Yves Dussin is anything to go by, the tradition still holds strong.
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Jan 22, 2024 |
editionsepa.fr | Joanna Maclennan |Oliver Maclennan
Résumé Living Wild est un récit inspirant qui relate les histoires de personnes du monde entier ayant embrassé un mode de vie plus proche de la nature. Des familles installées dans le bush australien aux couples vivant sur des bateaux étroits au Royaume-Uni, ils nous font entrer dans leur intimité et nous guide dans ce saut vers l’inconnu, vers un mode de vie alternatif et plus durable.
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Nov 13, 2023 |
homestolove.com.au | Oliver Maclennan |Joanna Maclennan
The names alone evoke a strong sense of place: Spargo Creek, Moorabool, the Great Dividing Range. The hamlet – "literally a sign on the road" – lies just off the freeway to Melbourne, amid thick forest, and close to Daylesford, a diverse and creative community where Natasha Morgan always stops for a morning cup of tea after dropping her children at school.
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