Instagram Logo

localworkstudio

Local Works Studio

We make things and design places. We tell the stories of local materials, processes and communities.
Loretta Bosence & Ben Bosence

1K
posts
3.7K
followers
12.3K
following

Welcome to Grounder, Local Works Studio’s new Journal! 👉link in bio

If you’re looking for a slower, intentional alternative to the more, ahem, excitable and morally ambiguous social media platforms (and apparently everyone is) then you could do worse than join us on 5ub5stack (cool code for our journal platform that hopefully flies under the algorithm radar).

Grounder is a place for people who are curious about the materiality of their built environment – their homes, workplaces, streets, parks and gardens; for those who want to explore alternatives to the destructive take-make-waste economy of construction; and those who want to find ways of making places that might instead contribute to a healthier, richer and more equitable earthly home for people and other living things.

It’s early days yet, but in the coming weeks and months on Grounder you can expect to find writing, photography and occasionally sound that explores themes of seasonal construction, building with plant-based materials, bioregionalism, circular economy, vernacular placemaking, craft, habitat creation and more. We will tell the stories and introduce the people behind the implementation of these old and new practices. All essays will aim to inform, but also to reflect what it means to be human in our current uncertain predicament - to occupy and make places and to go about our ordinary lives, trying to do the right thing, behind the curtain of landscape and city.

Link in bio, as they say.
#landscapearchitecture #architecture #landscapewriting #architecturewriting#substackwriter #substack #substackwriters #designsubstack #landscapejournal #grounder #vernacularlandscape


215
2
1 years ago


Welcome to Grounder, Local Works Studio’s new Journal! 👉link in bio

If you’re looking for a slower, intentional alternative to the more, ahem, excitable and morally ambiguous social media platforms (and apparently everyone is) then you could do worse than join us on 5ub5stack (cool code for our journal platform that hopefully flies under the algorithm radar).

Grounder is a place for people who are curious about the materiality of their built environment – their homes, workplaces, streets, parks and gardens; for those who want to explore alternatives to the destructive take-make-waste economy of construction; and those who want to find ways of making places that might instead contribute to a healthier, richer and more equitable earthly home for people and other living things.

It’s early days yet, but in the coming weeks and months on Grounder you can expect to find writing, photography and occasionally sound that explores themes of seasonal construction, building with plant-based materials, bioregionalism, circular economy, vernacular placemaking, craft, habitat creation and more. We will tell the stories and introduce the people behind the implementation of these old and new practices. All essays will aim to inform, but also to reflect what it means to be human in our current uncertain predicament - to occupy and make places and to go about our ordinary lives, trying to do the right thing, behind the curtain of landscape and city.

Link in bio, as they say.
#landscapearchitecture #architecture #landscapewriting #architecturewriting#substackwriter #substack #substackwriters #designsubstack #landscapejournal #grounder #vernacularlandscape


215
2
1 years ago

Welcome to Grounder, Local Works Studio’s new Journal! 👉link in bio

If you’re looking for a slower, intentional alternative to the more, ahem, excitable and morally ambiguous social media platforms (and apparently everyone is) then you could do worse than join us on 5ub5stack (cool code for our journal platform that hopefully flies under the algorithm radar).

Grounder is a place for people who are curious about the materiality of their built environment – their homes, workplaces, streets, parks and gardens; for those who want to explore alternatives to the destructive take-make-waste economy of construction; and those who want to find ways of making places that might instead contribute to a healthier, richer and more equitable earthly home for people and other living things.

It’s early days yet, but in the coming weeks and months on Grounder you can expect to find writing, photography and occasionally sound that explores themes of seasonal construction, building with plant-based materials, bioregionalism, circular economy, vernacular placemaking, craft, habitat creation and more. We will tell the stories and introduce the people behind the implementation of these old and new practices. All essays will aim to inform, but also to reflect what it means to be human in our current uncertain predicament - to occupy and make places and to go about our ordinary lives, trying to do the right thing, behind the curtain of landscape and city.

Link in bio, as they say.
#landscapearchitecture #architecture #landscapewriting #architecturewriting#substackwriter #substack #substackwriters #designsubstack #landscapejournal #grounder #vernacularlandscape


215
2
1 years ago

Some recent plaster samples for a project in Liverpool, made using clay and waste aggregates♻️blended with a small amount of lime putty for extra durability. #clayplaster #clayplastering


118
3
2 weeks ago

Some recent plaster samples for a project in Liverpool, made using clay and waste aggregates♻️blended with a small amount of lime putty for extra durability. #clayplaster #clayplastering


118
3
2 weeks ago

Casting the first section of the circular Harvest Moon tabletop 🌖- a research project with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects. Made with Chalk and plant aggregates from Kent. Strengthened by adding Apple rebar (year-old growth from pruned Apple trees 👉 see link in bio to Grounder for more info on Apple orchards), and Sweet Chestnut framing.


95
1
2 weeks ago

Casting the first section of the circular Harvest Moon tabletop 🌖- a research project with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects. Made with Chalk and plant aggregates from Kent. Strengthened by adding Apple rebar (year-old growth from pruned Apple trees 👉 see link in bio to Grounder for more info on Apple orchards), and Sweet Chestnut framing.


95
1
2 weeks ago

Casting the first section of the circular Harvest Moon tabletop 🌖- a research project with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects. Made with Chalk and plant aggregates from Kent. Strengthened by adding Apple rebar (year-old growth from pruned Apple trees 👉 see link in bio to Grounder for more info on Apple orchards), and Sweet Chestnut framing.


95
1
2 weeks ago


Casting the first section of the circular Harvest Moon tabletop 🌖- a research project with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects. Made with Chalk and plant aggregates from Kent. Strengthened by adding Apple rebar (year-old growth from pruned Apple trees 👉 see link in bio to Grounder for more info on Apple orchards), and Sweet Chestnut framing.


95
1
2 weeks ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago


For our latest post on Grounder go to the link in our bio. “When an orchard is grubbed out, it is a loss. At its most derivative, it is the loss of a valuable material resource. It is a loss of years of investment, stewardship and a reliable income for the farmer. It is the loss of carbon to the atmosphere and a fully functioning mechanism for sequestration. The loss of an orchard represents an erosion of our capacity for national food security and sovereignty – only 40% of apples consumed in the UK are grown here. We must not forget that it is also a loss to the personhood of the trees themselves, and a loss of a home to those more-than-human beings who come to depend on them. It also represents a loss to the distinctive culture and identity of communities around the UK – and anywhere else that apples grow and orchards are cultivated. It would be a mistake, however, to equate the grubbing up of orchards to the loss of a bucolic, monocultural concept of an England that never really existed, or to grieve, instead of acting. The loss, especially when an underperforming commercial orchard must be replaced, is actually a rare moment of possibility – a chance seedling from a discarded pip. It is a moment for re-evaluation, or remembering, of what orchards can do. Well-managed orchards can be complex habitats and cultural sites that exemplify hybridity and our capacity to provide for our own needs, whilst creating a mosaic of opportunities for others to benefit too. Orchards can enrich the diversity of our landscapes, cultures, food and ecologies, connecting us to place and to roots that run deeper and wider than nationhood.“


62
1 months ago

Lots of Sweet Chestnut working in the next few weeks for our project with @assembleofficial at Bramcote Park in Bermondsey, South London. Making some play features with excellent help from @shadesadastudio. Sweet Chestnut was felled from a coppice woodland managed by the RSPB in Groombridge, Kent. #coppice #woodworking #chestnut #play


94
1 months ago

Lots of Sweet Chestnut working in the next few weeks for our project with @assembleofficial at Bramcote Park in Bermondsey, South London. Making some play features with excellent help from @shadesadastudio. Sweet Chestnut was felled from a coppice woodland managed by the RSPB in Groombridge, Kent. #coppice #woodworking #chestnut #play


94
1 months ago

Lots of Sweet Chestnut working in the next few weeks for our project with @assembleofficial at Bramcote Park in Bermondsey, South London. Making some play features with excellent help from @shadesadastudio. Sweet Chestnut was felled from a coppice woodland managed by the RSPB in Groombridge, Kent. #coppice #woodworking #chestnut #play


94
1 months ago

Lots of Sweet Chestnut working in the next few weeks for our project with @assembleofficial at Bramcote Park in Bermondsey, South London. Making some play features with excellent help from @shadesadastudio. Sweet Chestnut was felled from a coppice woodland managed by the RSPB in Groombridge, Kent. #coppice #woodworking #chestnut #play


94
1 months ago

Starting to fabricate Harvest moon table 🌒 with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects There are lots of different materials and processes involved, but starting with some 50 year old Sweet Chestnut from a neglected, over-stood coppice.


68
1
1 months ago


Starting to fabricate Harvest moon table 🌒 with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects There are lots of different materials and processes involved, but starting with some 50 year old Sweet Chestnut from a neglected, over-stood coppice.


68
1
1 months ago

Starting to fabricate Harvest moon table 🌒 with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects There are lots of different materials and processes involved, but starting with some 50 year old Sweet Chestnut from a neglected, over-stood coppice.


68
1
1 months ago

Starting to fabricate Harvest moon table 🌒 with @_cat_rossi @charleshollandarchitects There are lots of different materials and processes involved, but starting with some 50 year old Sweet Chestnut from a neglected, over-stood coppice.


68
1
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

Images of ongoing research project #Harvestmoon with @_cat_rossi @charlesjholland. Gathering materials from Kent to make a table. Images of samples show cast chalk with Sweet Chestnut peelings, clay, red cabbage dye and cider vinegar stain on split Chestnut 💜


150
6
1 months ago

A great event coming up this week organised by @civic_square @fircroft_college in Birmingham, to wrap up and celebrate their Re:Builders program. Ben @localworkstudio will be providing a survey workshop and tour of the building alongside @tymawrlime Looking at repair, care, maintenance and potential retrofit options for existing buildings. Lots of other great speakers and workshops. @amarecoplaster Eventbrite link can be found via @civic_square #repair #architecture #maintenance #rebuilders #buildingcraft @material_cultures


25
1 months ago

A day well spent with my son, about to fly the nest. He took me up onto the Downs to childhood haunts. We looked over the town and the Weald through the haze, listened to the raving Skylarks and walked barefoot on the sheep mown grass.


127
8
1 months ago

A day well spent with my son, about to fly the nest. He took me up onto the Downs to childhood haunts. We looked over the town and the Weald through the haze, listened to the raving Skylarks and walked barefoot on the sheep mown grass.


127
8
1 months ago

A day well spent with my son, about to fly the nest. He took me up onto the Downs to childhood haunts. We looked over the town and the Weald through the haze, listened to the raving Skylarks and walked barefoot on the sheep mown grass.


127
8
1 months ago

A day well spent with my son, about to fly the nest. He took me up onto the Downs to childhood haunts. We looked over the town and the Weald through the haze, listened to the raving Skylarks and walked barefoot on the sheep mown grass.


127
8
1 months ago

A day well spent with my son, about to fly the nest. He took me up onto the Downs to childhood haunts. We looked over the town and the Weald through the haze, listened to the raving Skylarks and walked barefoot on the sheep mown grass.


127
8
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Exciting day for us, with deconstruction for reuse starting on-site at Bramcote Park, Bermondsey. We’ve been working on the design of the refurbishment of this park for Southwark Council with @assembleofficial since 2022, with a strong focus on reuse of features, site-won materials and trees from our previous collaboration at Granary Square. @redcollectivelondon @webbyates @blakedownlandscapes @studio.supernatural @theplayworksstudio @studio_dekka


171
5
1 months ago

Abandoned vehicle at the rec. Police aware. #play #playgrounds #risk


61
4
2 months ago

Abandoned vehicle at the rec. Police aware. #play #playgrounds #risk


61
4
2 months ago

Abandoned vehicle at the rec. Police aware. #play #playgrounds #risk


61
4
2 months ago

We used to use Instagram like a sketchbook - fast and loose, instinctive and for our own inspiration. Somewhere along the way we became self-conscious, a bit detached, and bored by the endless feed of targeted ads. However, we’ve decided to try and loosen up again. So expect a resumption of service of random stuff coming from this feed, just like the good old days…🤞 Here’s some special trees along a quiet ghyll on Ashdown Forest for starters.


193
8
2 months ago

We used to use Instagram like a sketchbook - fast and loose, instinctive and for our own inspiration. Somewhere along the way we became self-conscious, a bit detached, and bored by the endless feed of targeted ads. However, we’ve decided to try and loosen up again. So expect a resumption of service of random stuff coming from this feed, just like the good old days…🤞 Here’s some special trees along a quiet ghyll on Ashdown Forest for starters.


193
8
2 months ago

We used to use Instagram like a sketchbook - fast and loose, instinctive and for our own inspiration. Somewhere along the way we became self-conscious, a bit detached, and bored by the endless feed of targeted ads. However, we’ve decided to try and loosen up again. So expect a resumption of service of random stuff coming from this feed, just like the good old days…🤞 Here’s some special trees along a quiet ghyll on Ashdown Forest for starters.


193
8
2 months ago

We used to use Instagram like a sketchbook - fast and loose, instinctive and for our own inspiration. Somewhere along the way we became self-conscious, a bit detached, and bored by the endless feed of targeted ads. However, we’ve decided to try and loosen up again. So expect a resumption of service of random stuff coming from this feed, just like the good old days…🤞 Here’s some special trees along a quiet ghyll on Ashdown Forest for starters.


193
8
2 months ago

We used to use Instagram like a sketchbook - fast and loose, instinctive and for our own inspiration. Somewhere along the way we became self-conscious, a bit detached, and bored by the endless feed of targeted ads. However, we’ve decided to try and loosen up again. So expect a resumption of service of random stuff coming from this feed, just like the good old days…🤞 Here’s some special trees along a quiet ghyll on Ashdown Forest for starters.


193
8
2 months ago


Veja Stories do Instagram Secretamente

O Visualizador de Stories do Instagram é uma ferramenta fácil que permite assistir e salvar stories, vídeos, fotos ou IGTV do Instagram secretamente. Com este serviço, você pode baixar conteúdos e apreciá-los offline sempre que quiser. Se você encontrar algo interessante no Instagram que gostaria de ver mais tarde ou quiser visualizar stories de forma anônima, nosso Visualizador é perfeito para você. Anonstories oferece uma excelente solução para manter sua identidade oculta. O Instagram lançou a funcionalidade de Stories em agosto de 2023, que logo foi adotada por outras plataformas devido ao seu formato dinâmico e sensível ao tempo. Os Stories permitem que os usuários compartilhem atualizações rápidas, sejam fotos, vídeos ou selfies, com textos, emojis ou filtros, e ficam visíveis por apenas 24 horas. Esse limite de tempo cria maior engajamento em comparação com posts comuns. Nos dias de hoje, os Stories são uma das formas mais populares de se conectar e comunicar nas redes sociais. No entanto, quando você visualiza um Story, o criador pode ver seu nome na lista de visualizadores, o que pode ser uma preocupação com a privacidade. E se você quiser navegar pelos Stories sem ser notado? É aí que o Anonstories se torna útil. Ele permite que você assista a conteúdos públicos do Instagram sem revelar sua identidade. Basta digitar o nome de usuário do perfil que você está curioso, e a ferramenta mostrará seus Stories mais recentes. Funcionalidades do Visualizador Anonstories: - Navegação Anônima: Veja Stories sem aparecer na lista de visualizadores. - Sem Conta Necessária: Veja conteúdos públicos sem se cadastrar no Instagram. - Download de Conteúdos: Salve qualquer conteúdo de Stories diretamente no seu dispositivo para uso offline. - Veja Destaques: Acesse os Destaques do Instagram, até mesmo após o prazo de 24 horas. - Monitoramento de Reposts: Acompanhe os reposts ou o nível de engajamento em Stories de perfis pessoais. Limitações: - Esta ferramenta funciona apenas com contas públicas; contas privadas permanecem inacessíveis. Benefícios: - Amigável à Privacidade: Veja qualquer conteúdo do Instagram sem ser notado. - Simples e Fácil: Não há necessidade de instalação de aplicativo ou registro. - Ferramentas Exclusivas: Baixe e gerencie conteúdos de maneiras que o Instagram não oferece.

Vantagens do Anonstories

Explore Stories do IG Privadamente

Acompanhe as atualizações do Instagram de forma discreta, protegendo sua privacidade e permanecendo anônimo.


Visualizador Privado do Instagram

Veja perfis e fotos anonimamente com facilidade usando o Visualizador de Perfil Privado.


Visualizador de Stories Gratuito

Esta ferramenta gratuita permite que você veja Stories do Instagram anonimamente, garantindo que sua atividade permaneça oculta do criador do story.

Perguntas Frequentes

 
Anonimato

Anonstories permite que os usuários vejam stories do Instagram sem alertar o criador.

 
Compatibilidade com Dispositivos

Funciona perfeitamente em iOS, Android, Windows, macOS e navegadores modernos como Chrome e Safari.

 
Segurança e Privacidade

Prioriza navegação segura e anônima, sem necessidade de credenciais de login.

 
Sem Registro

Os usuários podem visualizar stories públicos digitando apenas o nome de usuário—sem precisar de uma conta.

 
Formatos Suportados

Baixa fotos (JPEG) e vídeos (MP4) com facilidade.

 
Custo

O serviço é gratuito.

 
Contas Privadas

Conteúdos de contas privadas só podem ser acessados por seguidores.

 
Uso de Arquivos

Os arquivos são para uso pessoal ou educacional, conforme as regras de direitos autorais.

 
Como Funciona

Digite um nome de usuário público para ver ou baixar stories. O serviço gera links diretos para salvar o conteúdo localmente.