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Showing posts with label David Wills House. Show all posts
Showing posts with label David Wills House. Show all posts

Friday, September 30, 2022

Who is David Wills?

After lunch, I decided to add a visit to the David Wills House. I knew it was part of the park but never the significance. This is the house that Lincoln stayed at the night before giving his Gettysburg Address. David Wills was instrumental in getting the National Cemetery established and then played host when Lincoln came to do the dedication. His house is on the square in Gettysburg.



I based this page on a CM Virtual Crop sketch. When I looked at the sketch I realized that one of the Fast-to-Fabulous pages that matched the one I used for the Eisenhower page was quite similar to the sketch. Instead of banners, it was white pine branches! I added a piece of white snow paper to the middle of the page so that the bricks wouldn't get lost in the red of the page. (Making it just wide enough to hold the unigrid). Since the ticket was too close in color to the white paper I mounted it on one of the tags from the embellishment pack. The left border is a laser-cut border from the Seasons Greetings line.

The downstairs rooms describe the Wills family and their daily life. Also included are period pieces salvaged from the battlefield such as the medical kit. In some ways, the rooms were stark as a lot of the details were on glass panels around the edges of the room. The NPS site has an excellent virtual tour on the website. If you've not been there in person, it's a great way to explore the site.



I decided to keep going with the F2F pages. The corner stripes were pre-printed. I added 2 laser cut borders to finish framing the page. I added a couple of embellishments from my Paper House pack of vintage die cuts. The top hat, the carriage, and the family walking (near the journal box) are all from that pad. Since the pages were a little light I used the decorative mats behind many of the photos to add some more depth.

The main attraction is of course the Lincoln Bedroom (the one in Gettysburg, not the one in the White House). They claim this is the original bed though most of the other items are just similar to how they would have looked during his stay. This is the room where he finished the speech that I would memorize in elementary school.



This layout is the end of the album and it worked out that there were just a few photos of the house left. I merged the 2 together so that there was a panorama view of the bed. It's a fairly simple layout with just a wallpaper background (some old Reminisce paper that rather matches the carpet) and white mats under the photos to keep them from getting lost. I added 2 corners to the journal box. These are die cuts from a very old CM Heritage kit.