The action or process of making a copy of something
A copy of a work of art, esp. a print or photograph of a painting
The production of offspring by a sexual or asexual process
replica: copy that is not the original; something that has been copied
recall that is hypothesized to work by storing the original stimulus input and reproducing it during recall
70 years of Penguin design - the Penguin-Isokon donkey
Using only plywood, Egon Riss and Jack Pritchard created a double-pannier bookshelf with four legs - hence the name 'Donkey' - for the Isokon Furniture Company. Allen Lane was so taken with it that he offered to distribute 100,000 promotional leaflets in new Penguin books free of charge. From then on, the bookshelf was know as the 'Penguin-Isokon Donkey'. Mark 2 is in stark contrast to Mark 1.0. Every surface is flat and almost every angle a right angle.
Penguin-Isokon Donkey Mark 1., by Egon Riss and Jack Pritchard, 1939
Modern reproduction by Isokon Plus
Soapy Smith's
These photos were all taken at Tiny Town Colorado. This little park was started in 1915 by a local furniture company. It's a fun place for photos, as the houses are all similar in scale to MSDs and Barbies.
Soapy Smith was quite a colorful character in the mid-19th century in Colorado and Alaska. He got his nickname from selling bars of soap for a dollar, claiming that one of the bars had a hundred dollar bill wrapped beneath the soap label. This building is a reproduction of the bar named for him that used to stand in downtown Denver.