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Cute Young Blonde Girl At The Column Grid
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Structure
Early columns were constructed of stone, some out of a single piece of stone. Single-piece columns are among the heaviest stones used in architecture. Other stone columns are created out of multiple sections of stone, mortared or dry-fit together. In many classical sites, sectioned columns were carved with a centre hole or depression so that they could be pegged together, using stone or metal pins. The design of most classical columns incorporates entasis (the inclusion of a slight outward curve in the sides) plus a reduction in diameter along the height of the column, so that the top is as little as 83% of the bottom diameter. This reduction mimics the parallax effects which the eye expects to see and tends to make columns look taller and straighter than they are while entasis adds to that effect.
Modern columns are constructed out of steel, poured or precast concrete, or brick. They may then be clad in an architectural covering (or veneer), or left bare. In modern terms, the impost (or pier) is the topmost member of a column. The bottom-most part of the arch, called the springing, rests on the impost.
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