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the wall behind MJKs headboard

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  • perrymason
    Guest replied
    As Chris George just suggested, Marys bed may not have been flush to the wall on the right side, so that bedroll may be in a place where it is kept during the day. If the space was constant, why not tuck it away to prevent staining and wear. It may be a quilted blanket of some kind, maybe hand stitched so easily worn when people sat or lay on it a lot.

    That would lead one to surmise she hadnt made the bed for sleep yet,....which may be true,....but a lot of booze and an hour off and on to sing might make a young woman flop back onto her pillow and pass out without doing so.

    I woke up last night at 3am in my chair1/2, with my glasses on, and a book open in my lap. I had a bottle of Beaujolais with my dinner.

    Just speculatin.

    All the best.

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  • Sam Flynn
    replied
    Originally posted by ChrisGeorge View Post
    Also I believe, as I said before, there was the disused washstand on the right side of the bed
    The illustration in Reynolds' News (I think it was - don't have it to hand) shows the disused washstand behind the headboard, occupying the space between it and the wall. This explains why the head of the bed wasn't flush against the wall - the washstand was "pushing" it towards the middle of the room.

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  • neathy
    replied
    Where is the table ?

    An interesting graphic, Chris. Can you integrate the table into it ? And what about the headboard shadow ? With the light strong enough to shine on the headboard pole on one side, shouldn't there be a shadow on the wall somewhere ? Thanx to all for the quick responses !

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  • Chris Scott
    replied
    I think there are two features in the Kelly picture which may serve to explain what is happening.
    1) the dominant feature in the back wall is, to my mind, undoubtedly a panel door that has been blocked off at some stage to make Room 13 a separate unit
    2) if the headboard were hard up against the wall of the room that formed the right hand side of the covered alleyway into Millers Court, then this panelled door would be set gard into the corner of the room, which would be an unusual arrangement to say the least
    If you follow the perspective lines - vertical and horizontal - of the section of wall that shows behind the headboard, it seems clear to me that this is a continuation of the section of wall containing the panelled door
    It really all depends on the position of the bed in the room when the pic was taken and the angle at which the camera was placed.
    I think the explanation is that the bed, at the point when the photo was taken, was not hard up against the alleyway wall of Room 13 but had been pulled out away from that wall.
    The first pic below (forgive the crude graphics) shows how things would have to be for the bed to be hard against the alleyway wall. Blue is the panelled door, red is the bed, and green is the rough field of view of the camera
    The second pic shows how I think things were when the pic was taken - the same colours used. If this is correct, no section of the alleayway wall would have been caught by the camera, and what we are seeing behind the headboard is simply a continuation of the internal wall containing the panelled door
    Attached Files

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  • Stephen Thomas
    replied
    Originally posted by ChrisGeorge View Post
    The headboard was not flat against the wall. What people fail to realise is that there is a break in the wall so that it doesn't reach a perpendicular angle, i.e.,


    Sorry, I don't understand that, Chris. Where is the 'break' in the wall?

    In fact, what is a 'break' in a wall?

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  • ChrisGeorge
    replied
    Hi Folks

    The headboard was not flat against the wall. What people fail to realise is that there is a break in the wall so that it doesn't reach a perpendicular angle, i.e.,



    Also I believe, as I said before, there was the disused washstand on the right side of the bed, like the one shown below, so the bed didn't sit directly against that wall either.



    Chris
    Last edited by ChrisGeorge; 03-06-2009, 10:59 PM.

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  • Stephen Thomas
    replied
    Originally posted by neathy View Post
    Why doesn't the head board square up with the planks that make up the wall behind it. the piece of wood that makes up the top of the headboard is WAY out of angle with the edges of the planks ( which I would assume are fairly straight, they match the vertical line of the table leg. I don't even see a 'corner' of where the walls meet. And if you follow the plank edges on through the headboard it looks even stranger. And where is the SHADOW of the headboard ? On the vertical piece of wood closest to the wall I see light shining on one side of it, but no corresponding shadow on the wall. After years of looking at copies of this photo it 'Just don't look right'.
    Hi neathy and Welcome

    Yes, it doesn't look right at all, does it?

    All the angles are wrong for the bed to to be against the back wall.

    It looks like a flat wall behind the side of the bed to me so it could be that the bed was a few feet away from the back wall in the photo.

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  • miss marple
    replied
    The headboard looks propped up. Its not attached to the back of the bed. The mattress is just resting on planks on a base.
    Miss Marple

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  • neathy
    started a topic the wall behind MJKs headboard

    the wall behind MJKs headboard

    Why doesn't the head board square up with the planks that make up the wall behind it. the piece of wood that makes up the top of the headboard is WAY out of angle with the edges of the planks ( which I would assume are fairly straight, they match the vertical line of the table leg. I don't even see a 'corner' of where the walls meet. And if you follow the plank edges on through the headboard it looks even stranger. And where is the SHADOW of the headboard ? On the vertical piece of wood closest to the wall I see light shining on one side of it, but no corresponding shadow on the wall. After years of looking at copies of this photo it 'Just don't look right'.
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