 When I saw this on  Bowery, I thought that the hand written "no security" was a warning added by a second party, as in "this building offers no security and your stuff will get stolen." But maybe the creator of the flyer added it, meaning  that no security deposit is necessary.  That's something that I'd want to know before moving in with my photo studio or editing suite.
When I saw this on  Bowery, I thought that the hand written "no security" was a warning added by a second party, as in "this building offers no security and your stuff will get stolen." But maybe the creator of the flyer added it, meaning  that no security deposit is necessary.  That's something that I'd want to know before moving in with my photo studio or editing suite.
Friday, April 18, 2008
No Security
 When I saw this on  Bowery, I thought that the hand written "no security" was a warning added by a second party, as in "this building offers no security and your stuff will get stolen." But maybe the creator of the flyer added it, meaning  that no security deposit is necessary.  That's something that I'd want to know before moving in with my photo studio or editing suite.
When I saw this on  Bowery, I thought that the hand written "no security" was a warning added by a second party, as in "this building offers no security and your stuff will get stolen." But maybe the creator of the flyer added it, meaning  that no security deposit is necessary.  That's something that I'd want to know before moving in with my photo studio or editing suite.
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