ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 2月16日 23時20分


The romance of a tiny portable home is forever linked to images of open highways in postwar America. But such transient dwellings made their way into the public imagination in Europe much earlier. In the late 19th century, William Gordon Stables, a Scottish author of books for boys, commissioned the first “gentleman’s caravan” to travel the UK. The author called his horse-drawn cabin “The Wanderer.” Unlike him, the interior designer Paola Moretti wanted to keep her caravan — a dilapidated Roller Super 3, built in Italy around 1960 — in one place. She and her son live east of Milan. But Paola had spent her childhood summers in seaside Tuscany, and she knew the perfect spot to keep the caravan: a secluded beach in Punta Ala. “We pretend we are in a magic tiny house abandoned in a forest,” she says. “And, really, there is no reason not to believe it.” See more of @daniloscarpati’s photos of this caravan in #Tuscany from @tmagazine.


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