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		<updated>2026-06-14T02:22:25Z</updated>
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	<entry>
		<id>https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=How_To_Make_Your_Kitchen_Furniture_Do_Double_Duty_(Without_Losing_Your_Mind)&amp;diff=68865</id>
		<title>How To Make Your Kitchen Furniture Do Double Duty (Without Losing Your Mind)</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=How_To_Make_Your_Kitchen_Furniture_Do_Double_Duty_(Without_Losing_Your_Mind)&amp;diff=68865"/>
				<updated>2026-06-13T21:58:57Z</updated>
		
		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;ShavonneB66 : Page créée avec « The biggest mistake I see is underestimating the bedding problem. People buy a queen-size bed with storage drawers, then they shove three sets of sheets and a comforter in... »&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;The biggest mistake I see is underestimating the bedding problem. People buy a queen-size bed with storage drawers, then they shove three sets of sheets and a comforter into an overhead bin and call it done. But bedding expands. It breathes. A single duvet takes up as much volume as a winter coat. In a walk-in closet that also houses a sofa bed, you need dedicated space for the guest linens. I recommend a vertical pull-down hamper system in the far corner. It hangs from a telescopic rod and folds flat when not in use. Inside, you can store two sets of sheets, four pillowcases, and a lightweight blanket. The fabric is breathable mesh, so nothing gets musty. The system costs under fifty dollars and installs with two screws. That small addition stops the closet from becoming a dumping ground for mismatched pillow shams. It also keeps the velvet upholstery of the pull-out sofa from getting dusted in lint from nearby tow&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The problem with most living rooms that double as bedrooms is the transition. You have dinner with friends, then someone says they need to sleep, and suddenly you are wrestling with a pile of pillows and trying to hide your laptop cables. Mood lighting solves this by creating zones. Instead of one bright ceiling fixture, I use a floor lamp with a dimmer behind the pull-out sofa and a small reading light on a bookshelf. When the overhead light goes off and the lamp comes on, the room shrinks to something intimate. The pull-out sofa becomes a bed. The coffee table becomes a nightstand. The mood shifts without anyone having to rearrange furnit&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;If you have overnight guests, pay attention to where [http://www.fujiapuerbbs.com/home.php?mod=space&amp;amp;uid=3851331&amp;amp;do=profile&amp;amp;from=space shadows] fall. A reading light positioned behind the pull-out sofa will illuminate the book but leave the guest’s face in soft shadow, which feels private. Conversely, a light placed directly behind a person’s head creates a harsh silhouette that makes conversation feel tense. I learned this after a dinner party where my cousin spent the whole evening squinting. I moved the lamp to the side table the next day. Problem solved. Small adjustments like that cost nothing but change everything about how a room functions after d&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Storage for bedding remains the biggest hidden problem. You buy a lovely sofa bed, you fold it out, and then you realize you have nowhere to keep the sheets and pillows when the bed is not in use. That is where the bed with storage saves your sanity. Look for models where the entire seat base lifts up on gas pistons. Inside, there is a compartment big enough for a set of twin sheets, two standard pillows, and a thin quilt. Some even have a built-in divider so you can separate the clean linens from the fleece throw you use during winter. I keep a small vacuum bag in there too, just in case the foam mattress ever needs compressing for deep cleaning. The velvet upholstery on my current sofa bed has a stain-resistant coating, so a splash of red wine wipes off with a microfiber cloth and a dab of dish soap. No lingering smells, no permanent r&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Now, a word about the bed with storage situation. If you have a bed frame that lifts to reveal a cavity underneath, you probably stash extra blankets and pillows there. But when you convert your sofa at night, you need those extra bedding items to be accessible. I used to pile them on a chair, which looked chaotic and took up valuable floor space. Then I installed floor-to-ceiling curtains and drapes that pool slightly on the ground. Behind the curtain on the non-window side, I attached a fabric shoe organizer to the wall, but I used it for pillowcases, a lightweight duvet, and a spare mattress protector. When the sofa becomes a bed, I simply pull the  aside, grab what I need, and let the fabric fall back. The whole setup is invisible from the living area. No clutter, no folding, no dedicated linen cabinet. The curtain becomes a secret storage door that takes zero square footage and costs less than a standalone storage u&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Another practical detail: the click-clack mechanism. Do not confuse this with a cheap folding chair. A quality click-clack operates with a locking lever that prevents the backrest from snapping shut while someone is sleeping. I have seen cheap versions that collapse under the weight of an average adult, sending the person sprawling onto the tile floor at 2 a.m. A good mechanism uses reinforced steel hinges and a push-button release. Test it in the store. Open it three times. If it wobbles or sticks, walk away. Your kitchen furniture needs to handle daily use as a seating area, not just an occasional guest bed. That means the cushions should be firm enough to sit on for a three-hour dinner party, yet forgiving enough to sleep on for three nights. I prefer a high-resilience foam wrapped in a polyester fiber layer. It bounces back quickly after someone gets up, and it does not develop permanent body impressions like cheaper polyureth&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The last piece of the puzzle is the floor. A hallway with a sofa bed gets heavy traffic. A thin carpet runner will bunch under the sofa legs. I switched to a low-pile wool runner that sits flat and is easy to vacuum. The sofa itself sits on four small plastic glides that slide over wool without catching. If you have hard floors, a felt pad under the sofa legs protects the finish. Avoid rubber-backed rugs. They trap moisture and break down against foam mattress storage. For the pull-out portion, I cut a small piece of felt to place under the slatted frame when it is extended. That prevents scratches on the floor as the guest shifts around. Small details like that separate a [https://Www.Answers.com/search?q=usable%20hallway usable hallway] design from a frustrating one. When you take the time to protect the flooring and the furniture, the whole setup feels permanent and intentional, not like a piece of camping gear stuck in a corri&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>ShavonneB66</name></author>	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Let_Them_Eat_Cake:_The_Kitchen_Lighting_Lie_That_Saved_My_Hosting_Sanity&amp;diff=68386</id>
		<title>Let Them Eat Cake: The Kitchen Lighting Lie That Saved My Hosting Sanity</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Let_Them_Eat_Cake:_The_Kitchen_Lighting_Lie_That_Saved_My_Hosting_Sanity&amp;diff=68386"/>
				<updated>2026-06-13T20:46:38Z</updated>
		
		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;ShavonneB66 : Page créée avec « The solution came in the form of a swing-arm wall lamp mounted above the sink, aimed downward. It has a warm white bulb with a narrow beam, so it illuminates the basin and... »&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;The solution came in the form of a swing-arm wall lamp mounted above the sink, aimed downward. It has a warm white bulb with a narrow beam, so it illuminates the basin and the dish drying rack without spilling light into the living room. I can wash a wine glass at midnight while my friend sleeps on the [https://Www.Paramuspost.com/search.php?query=pull-out&amp;amp;type=all&amp;amp;mode=search&amp;amp;results=25 pull-out] sofa five feet away, and she never stirs. The lamp cost me forty dollars at a vintage lighting store, and it took twenty minutes to install with a voltage tester and a wire stripper. That single fixture solved a problem that a million lumens in the ceiling never could. The rest of the kitchen now stays dark, and the sofa bed stays dark, and everybody gets to sl&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;I have stood in the dark of my own kitchen at 2 a.m., clutching a glass of water, and wondered how I ever thought a single overhead fixture was enough. That naked bulb, a builder-grade flush mount, cast shadows across the countertops and turned every corner into a guessing game. It took one too many stubbed toes and one too many squinting attempts to read a recipe before I admitted the obvious: kitchen lighting is not a luxury, it is a survival tool. And when you live in a small apartment where the kitchen doubles as a dining room, a home office, and sometimes a staging area for overnight guests, the stakes get higher. A single light source simply does not cut it when you are trying to chop onions without losing a finger&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Wall storage became the final puzzle. I mounted a floating shelf above the bed with storage, wide enough for a stack of books and a tiny succulent. No heavy art, just a few small frames leaning against the wall. On the opposite wall, I hung a simple peg rail. This holds a canvas tote bag with my laptop, a spare jacket, and a set of keys. The peg rail keeps the floor empty and stops me from dumping everything on the sofa bed the second I walk in the door. The space feels bigger because nothing sits on the floor except the furniture itself. Even the pull-out sofa has skinny legs that lift it an inch above the carpet, giving the illusion of air beneath&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;I keep adding panels to other rooms now. A vertical strip behind the desk in the corner. A horizontal band above the kitchen counter. Each installation changes the way I see the space. The principle remains the same regardless of the room. Wall panels shift the visual weight of a room away from the furniture and toward the architecture. When you live in a small space, the furniture is always a compromise. The architecture is what you can control. I will never own a dining room or a guest room or a home office. But I can make my single room do all three jobs without screaming for more square footage. That feels like a small kind of magic. The foam mattress folds away. The slatted frame supports my guests. The click-clack mechanism clicks and clacks. And the wall panels just stand there, quietly, making everything else look like it belo&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;I learned the hard way about the importance of a slatted frame. Cheap sofa beds skip this detail and you end up sleeping on a board with a thin cushion on top. Your hips ache. Your shoulders ache. Your guests wake up cranky and leave early. The slatted frame on my click-clack mechanism has curved wooden slats, each one spring-loaded. They flex slightly under weight, which relieves pressure points. Combined with the 16 cm foam mattress, the sleeping surface rivals many guest room beds I have slept in at friends homes. And when the bed is folded back into sofa mode, the slats disappear into the frame entirely. The foam mattress slides into a storage compartment built into the base. Total footprint on the floor is two [https://WWW.Clicksordirectory.com/details.php?id=505043 square meters]. The wall panels above it remain visible, their vertical lines drawing the eye up and away from the compact footprint be&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Fitting a full life into a single room means every piece of furniture has to earn its square footage. When I first moved into my 320-square-foot studio, the biggest headache wasn't the kitchen counter doubling as a desk or the bathroom where my knees touched the shower wall. It was the bed. A standard queen frame devoured the floor, left no room for a seating area, and made the whole place feel like a dorm room for a grown adult who pays too much rent. I needed something that could switch between a living room during the day and a bedroom at night without a wrestling match. That search led me straight into the world of sofa beds, specifically the kind that doesn't feel like you are sleeping on a pile of loose spri&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;I live in a 45 square meter apartment, and my dining table doubled as a desk for two years. Every evening, I cleared away the laptop, the cables, the half-empty coffee cup, just to eat a bowl of pasta. My back ached from the hard wooden chair, and my papers stacked up on the couch like a . Then I finally carved out a corner near the window for a dedicated desk. It [https://www.houzz.com/photos/query/changed changed] my working life. But it also created a new problem. The room that housed my desk was supposed to be a guest room too. My mother visits twice a year, and my brother crashes for a weekend every few months. I needed a bed. Not just any bed, but one that could disappear during the day and still let me spin around in my office chair without knocking my kn&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>ShavonneB66</name></author>	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=How_To_Choose_Living_Room_Colors_Without_Losing_Your_Mind&amp;diff=68110</id>
		<title>How To Choose Living Room Colors Without Losing Your Mind</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=How_To_Choose_Living_Room_Colors_Without_Losing_Your_Mind&amp;diff=68110"/>
				<updated>2026-06-13T19:55:14Z</updated>
		
		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;ShavonneB66 : Page créée avec « Of course, not every space can accommodate a full guest bed. That is where a well-chosen sofa bed comes into its own. My criteria for a sustainable sofa bed started with t... »&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;Of course, not every space can accommodate a full guest bed. That is where a well-chosen sofa bed comes into its own. My criteria for a sustainable sofa bed started with the frame. Solid hardwood, not particleboard, because particleboard is riddled with formaldehyde binders that off-gas for years. I found one with a click-clack mechanism that makes converting from sofa to bed a one-handed operation. No more struggling to pull a heavy mattress base [https://www.abgodnessmoto.co.uk/index.php?page=user&amp;amp;action=pub_profile&amp;amp;id=275444&amp;amp;item_type=active&amp;amp;per_page=16 forward]. The mechanism is simple metal levers and springs, and it is designed to be repairable rather than disposable. For the upholstery, I chose a velvet upholstery made from recycled polyester fibers. It sounds counterintuitive, but using recycled plastics reduces demand for virgin synthetic fabrics and keeps waste out of landfills. The velvet feels plush, is stain-resistant, and hides the inevitable cat hair well. The mattress inside is a slim but supportive layer of natural coir and cotton, stuffed into a removable, washable cover made from organic li&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Another factor that people ignore: traffic patterns and wear. If your living room leads straight to the kitchen or a hallway where muddy shoes land, you cannot have a white wall that shows every scuff. I painted my own hallway a deep mushroom brown after two weeks of seeing fingerprints near the light switch. In a living room that also contains a bed with storage underneath for spare blankets, the wall color needs to handle occasional bumped corners. Flat matte paints look lovely but mark easily. Eggshell or satin finishes clean up with a damp sponge. So when you are thinking about how to choose living room colors, also think about what will touch those walls. Kids, dogs, guests, your own elbows when you flop down on the sofa after a long &amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Now, the mechanism matters more than the fabric. I see people get seduced by a gorgeous velvet [https://twitter.com/search?q=upholstery upholstery] on a showroom floor, but they never test the click-clack mechanism three times in a row. Velvet looks amazing in photos, yes, and feels lovely against bare skin on a lazy Sunday. But if the frame underneath is cheap metal bars that fight you every time you try to convert it, you will hate that piece within two months. I have a client who bought a stunning emerald-green sofa with a click-clack backrest that folds flat. She loved the color, the soft pile, the way it photographed. She used the conversion feature exactly once. The mechanism jammed halfway down and she had to call her brother to help muscle it back upright. The velvet upholstery was the pretty face, but the mechanics were the backbone, and they fai&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The click-clack mechanism adds another layer of practicality. Unlike traditional sofa beds that require pulling out a heavy metal frame, the click-clack simply tilts the backrest flat. This means you don’t have to move the coffee table or rearrange the kitchen island stools. In a tight layout, every inch of clearance counts. I can convert my sofa from a seating area to a bed in ten seconds flat, even with a bowl of fruit on the counter behind it. The mechanism locks securely when upright, so you don’t accidentally recline while [http://Www.sunti-Apairach.com/nakhonchum1/index.php?name=webboard&amp;amp;file=read&amp;amp;id=1204160 sitting] down with a hot cup of coffee. And when you need to vacuum underneath, the entire mechanism lifts easily to access the slatted fr&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The velvet upholstery, I admit, required a bit of research. Most velvets are synthetic polyester, which is basically plastic. But I found a mill that weaves recycled plastic bottles into a dense, low-pile velvet. It looks and feels like the real thing, but it has a fraction of the environmental footprint. I also made sure the sofa bed's frame was built from [https://venturebeat.com/?s=FSC%20certified FSC certified] ash wood, which is both strong and light. The pull-out sofa mechanism, when I inspected it at the showroom, had no cheap plastic gears. Just steel and reinforced wood. It cost more upfront, about 40 percent more than a standard sofa from a big box store. But I calculated the cost per use over a decade, factoring in that I will not need to replace it in five years when the particleboard starts sagging. That is the hidden math of sustainable design. You pay for durability and healthy materials once, rather than buying cheap &amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The first time I tried to pick a living room color, I ended up with three different sample swatches taped to the wall for a full month. My husband walked in one evening and said, &amp;quot;Is that beige, grey, or what?&amp;quot; That is the problem. Living room colors feel permanent, like a tattoo you cannot laser off. But they do not have to be scary. You need a starting point that is not a blank white grid. Look at the biggest piece of furniture in the room. For most of us, that is the sofa. If you own a pull-out sofa with velvet upholstery in a deep teal, that teal is not negotiable. It is your anchor. Everything else must play nice with that fabric, that shape, that weight. I learned this the hard way when I painted my first apartment a pale lavender and my olive green sofa bed suddenly looked like a moldy pic&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>ShavonneB66</name></author>	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Loft_Style_Furniture:_Bringing_Industrial_Soul_Into_A_Shoebox&amp;diff=67645</id>
		<title>Loft Style Furniture: Bringing Industrial Soul Into A Shoebox</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Loft_Style_Furniture:_Bringing_Industrial_Soul_Into_A_Shoebox&amp;diff=67645"/>
				<updated>2026-06-13T18:17:14Z</updated>
		
		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;ShavonneB66 : Page créée avec « Color choice in wall art for a sofa bed scenario is not about matching the velvet upholstery exactly. That creates a flat, boring vignette. Instead, look at the undertones... »&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;Color choice in wall art for a sofa bed scenario is not about matching the velvet upholstery exactly. That creates a flat, boring vignette. Instead, look at the undertones in your foam mattress cover or the piping on the throw pillows. If your sofa bed has a charcoal fabric, pick wall art with one warm accent, maybe a mustard stripe or a terracotta circle. The contrast pulls the eye across the room and makes the sleeping zone feel intentional, not accidental. I once paired a navy blue pull-out sofa with a pale pink abstract in a white frame. The combo softened the heavy furniture and made the small space feel airier. Guests thought I had hired a decora&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;You spent a whole weekend assembling that IKEA sofa bed with the click-clack mechanism, only to realize the wall behind it is a blank canvas of builder beige. This is where the magic of wall art sneaks in and changes everything. I learned this the hard way after hosting my brother for a week. He slept on my pull-out sofa, which converts from a two-seater to a queen-size bed with a slatted frame and a 10 cm foam mattress that felt decent for a guest but looked sad wedged between white walls and a gray rug. The room lacked soul. So I hung a single large abstract print above the sofa, and suddenly the whole function of the space shifted. The bed with storage underneath became a focal point, not just a survival tool for short vis&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;The biggest problem in a small floor plan is always the bed. You need one, but you cannot dedicate a full third of your space to a mattress on a permanent platform. A sofa bed is the obvious answer, but the traditional ones are disasters. I have wrestled with sagging springs and thin foam that left me sleeping on a metal bar. The trick is to look for a pull-out sofa that uses a slatted frame instead of a wire grid. The slats allow the mattress to breathe and provide even support. Pair that with a 16 cm foam mattress, and you have a real sleeping surface that does not feel like a camping cot. You want the mechanism to be smooth, too. A cheap pull-out will fight you every time you try to open it, and in a tight room, that struggle feels ten times wo&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Small floor plans demand that every object earns its square footage. Your wall art can also solve the problem of nowhere to stash extra pillows and blankets. I use a deep shelf mounted directly above the headboard area of my pull-out sofa. On it, I lean a changing rotation of framed prints, and behind them I tuck folded throws and a spare foam topper. The art leans forward, hiding the bedding stack completely. This trick works because the eye reads the layered frames first, not the bulk behind them. The result is a tidier room without adding any furniture. The wall art does double duty as decoration and camouflage, which is exactly what you need when your guest room is also your living r&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;Real problems arrive when you have no space for a dresser or a proper closet near the sleeping area. Overnight guests often park their bags on the floor, and if your wall art is too fussy or too small, the whole setup feels like a hostel. I once placed a busy multi-panel gallery above a guest sofa bed, and the result was visual chaos. The velvet upholstery clashed with the mismatched frames, and the slatted frame creaked every time someone turned over. So I stripped the wall down to one bold textile piece, a woven mandala with deep blues and ochres. That single shift calmed the room and gave the bed with storage a quiet authority. Guests stopped noticing the missing closet and started complimenting the st&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;But here is the sneaky detail that most people overlook. A sofa bed, no matter how good, creates a new storage crisis. When the bed is open, where do the sofa cushions go? And where does the duvet live when the sofa is closed? In a small apartment, you cannot afford to toss the pillows onto a chair or shove the blanket behind the TV stand. That is not home organization. That is organized chaos, and it will drive you crazy by the third night. So we added a storage bench on the opposite wall. It is narrow, only 40 cm deep, and it holds two spare pillows, a queen-size duvet, and the fitted sheet for the foam mattress. The bench also works as extra seating for dinner parties. That bench cost forty euros at a flea market. I spray-painted the legs and added a cushion. It looks intentio&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;&amp;lt;br&amp;gt;One trick I learned late was to anchor the entire room with a single large statement piece. A dramatic floor lamp with an articulated arm, a vintage factory cart turned coffee table, or a solid wood dining table on trestle legs. My choice was a long, low console table made from a salvaged door slab, set on hairpin legs. It sits behind the sofa and holds books, a small plant, and a tray for keys. It does not block the path to the sofa bed. It creates a defined zone without walls. This is the core of loft style furniture: function without excess. You do not buy something decorative that just sits there. Every object earns its square footage. If a table cannot hold a lamp and your laptop, it does not belong. If a chair cannot be pulled into conversation or angled toward the window, it fails the test. The openness of the layout demands that each piece multi-task. My coffee table has a lower shelf for magazines, but I also put my feet on it. That is hon&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>ShavonneB66</name></author>	</entry>

	<entry>
		<id>https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Utilisateur:ShavonneB66&amp;diff=67644</id>
		<title>Utilisateur:ShavonneB66</title>
		<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://apds.ircam.fr/index.php?title=Utilisateur:ShavonneB66&amp;diff=67644"/>
				<updated>2026-06-13T18:17:11Z</updated>
		
		<summary type="html">&lt;p&gt;ShavonneB66 : Page créée avec « Enthusiast von gutem Design seit mehreren Jahren, der Inspirationen zum Thema Wohnen und Einrichten teilt. Ich glaube fest daran, dass jedes Zuhause seine eigene Geschicht... »&lt;/p&gt;
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&lt;div&gt;Enthusiast von gutem Design seit mehreren Jahren, der Inspirationen zum Thema Wohnen und Einrichten teilt. Ich glaube fest daran, dass jedes Zuhause seine eigene Geschichte erzählen sollte.&lt;/div&gt;</summary>
		<author><name>ShavonneB66</name></author>	</entry>

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