Tag: Van Gogh

  • Rainy Alley in Second Life

    Rainy Alley in Second Life

    Rainy Alley – A survivor

    High above Bay City, at 1614 metres, Rainy Alley continues to exist quietly in the sky. In Second Life, places often feel temporary, here today and gone next week, yet Rainy Alley feels as if it has been there forever, unchanged, patient, and oddly comforting.

    I first visited Rainy Alley over ten years ago. Since then, I have dropped back from time to time. A question in the Second Life Destinations Facebook group asked where to find a place to dance in the rain. I immediately thought of Rainy Alley. I went in-world to check if it was still there.Not only was it still present, but by coincidence, Viktoria Sabretooth was busy filming herself dancing in the rain.

    From a tiny plot to a lasting presence

    Rainy Alley’s history can be traced with unusual clarity. On 11 April 2011, creator Mog Munster posted on the Second Life Community Forums. He had finished a small rainy alley with an art gallery. It sat on a tiny mainland plot of just 1024 square metres. Mog asked for feedback, and even for ideas on how to use the final twelve prims.

    By March 2012, Rainy Alley had arrived at its current skybox location. Forum photographs show how the build gradually evolved into the space we see today. Very few places in Second Life carry this kind of documented lineage, and standing there now, that history feels present rather than abstract.

    Walking into the rain

    Stepping into Rainy Alley feels like walking into a film noir set. A narrow passage stretches ahead, flanked by two storey building facades, with only the art gallery fully accessible. Shared lighting casts a dim, moody glow, while rain falls constantly, heavy enough to feel almost physical.

    Thunder rolls overhead, and lightning flashes regularly, briefly illuminating wet brickwork, bins, discarded furniture, and dressmaker’s mannequins abandoned in the shadows. The soundscape does much of the work here, with the constant drumming of rain encouraging you to slow down.

    You arrive beside a blue British police telephone box, instantly recognisable to fans of Doctor Who. It feels placed with intention, quietly hinting at what lies ahead.

    Details that reward looking

    Along the alley, travel posters advertise distant destinations, “See India” among them, their optimism sharply contrasting with the rain soaked surroundings. Each poster can be clicked and changed, a small interactive touch that rewards curiosity.

    Halfway along, steam rises from a manhole cover.The original teleport no longer works. However, use careful camera movement and a little patience, It is still possible to find your way down into the club and bar below. These small imperfections feel honest, reminders of the build’s age rather than flaws.

    Art, time, and quiet humour

    Unless you have an umbrella, you may feel grateful to see the door of the art gallery, offering shelter from the incessant rain.

    Inside, the mood shifts gently. Van Gogh inspired works line the walls, including a striking piece depicting the Doctor and his granddaughter. Doctor Who, first broadcast in 1963, becomes a subtle thread running through the space.

    An upstairs room, reached via teleport, continues these references. A 2010 episode of Doctor Who links the Doctor with Van Gogh. This episode is a favourite of Oscar Eldrich, the current owner of Rainy Alley. Happily, the references never overwhelm. Instead, they add a layer of quiet, personal humour.

    Why Rainy Alley still matters

    Rainy Alley is not showy, and it does not try to impress. It exists as it always has, offering atmosphere, memory, and a place to pause. You can rez objects here, with auto return after sixty minutes, which makes it suitable for photography, especially if you enjoy working with rain and light.

    More than that, it stands as a reminder of an earlier Second Life, where creativity often grew from limitations rather than abundance. It has not only withstood the arrival of mesh, PBR, and EEP, but has quietly thrived, and it continues to attract regular visitors. Rainy Alley has survived not by changing, but by staying true to itself, and that makes it something rather special.

    If you’d like to see more places like this, follow my blog, Exploring Second Life, where I share both the grand builds and the smaller “quick stops” that make the grid so rewarding.

    Join us in the Second Life Destinations Facebook Group, where bloggers share new finds.
    Photographers: post your snapshots in the Second Life Destinations Flickr Group.

  • La Fée Verte – An Art Nouveau Absinthe Salon in Second Life

    La Fée Verte – An Art Nouveau Absinthe Salon in Second Life

    La Fée Verte is a beautiful Art Nouveau-style build in Second Life, set in a snowy Arctic Circle landscape. Designed by ღ Babe ღ (babe.whimsy), it mixes icy surroundings with the green glow of absinthe.

    The Second Life Destination Guide describes it as:

    “La Fee Verte is a beautiful place to hang out and chill. It’s created in the Art Nouveau style as authentically as possible. PBR is in use here, so you will need an updated viewer. Many of the land masses are actually off the region, but you can still access them by sitting on the benches provided. Views can be enjoyed from anywhere, but they are at their best from the upper balcony. Shared environment is essential.”

    So I took out my winter gear and snowshoes and set off to explore.

    First Impressions of La Fée Verte Second Life

    Arriving at the landing point, snow and mist form a striking backdrop. Beautiful, perfect, pristine, yet merciless. Like a siren’s call, it tempts you to linger and marvel but would freeze you to death without remorse. The silence is broken only by your footsteps. This is a place where loveliness itself can kill; best to hurry inside.

    The Absinthe Salon

    The atmosphere shifts as soon as you step inside the two-storey Art Deco building. The lighting is dim and atmospheric, perfect for settling into a sofa with friends or enjoying quiet exploration.

     Everywhere you turn, the salon reinforces its theme; bottles, posters, and details recalling the Belle Époque’s fascination with “the Green Fairy”

    A famous Henri Privat-Livemont poster for Absinthe Robette hangs on one wall. Another shows a café scene that includes Van Gogh, himself a known absinthe drinker.

    Despite the snowy world outside, the salon feels warm and welcoming. Sofas, plants, and details on every wall make it perfect for relaxing or photography. The green light gives everything a dreamy quality, almost like stepping into a painting.

    The dark side Absinthe

    And yet, perhaps all is not as it seems. The observant explorer will notice one image that is particularly unsettling: a winged figure dangles hooks into the heads and bodies of those below, pulling their flesh out of shape and controlling them like grotesque marionettes.

    It recalls an older tradition of fairies — not Disney’s carefree sprites, but mischievous, even cruel beings, who could lure mortals to harm. Like the snow scene outside, La Fée Verte can be seductive and alluring but edged with danger.

    Views and Exploration

    La Fée Verte is more than just its main building. The outside landscaping is carefully arranged, with snowy paths and striking vistas. Using the benches dotted around the region, you can sit and move to some of the outlying landmasses, many of which sit just beyond the main area’s boundaries and cannot be reached on foot.

    A teleport outside the salon also connects to other linked spots, offering further exploration opportunities after relaxing here.

    Community & Groups

    La Fée Verte has both a Second Life group and its own Flickr group where visitors share photos of their experiences:

    Teleport: Visit La Fée Verte in Second Life

    SL Group: La Fée Verte – Patrons (free to join)

    Flickr Group: La Fée Verte ~ Absinthe Salon

    Facebook Page: La Fée Verte SL

    Final Thoughts

    La Fée Verte blends Art Nouveau charm with Second Life’s immersive possibilities. It is at once a cosy hangout, an imaginative showcase of absinthe’s cultural mystique, and a landscape of snow and green light.

    Whether you come for photos, conversation, or simply to enjoy the atmosphere, it is a destination well worth a visit. But be on your guard; fairies, green or otherwise, are not to be trifled with.

    Exploring Second Life

    If you would like to see more places like this, follow my blog, Exploring Second Life. I’ll keep sharing both the grand regions and some smaller “quick stops” that make the grid such fun to explore.

    Join us in the Second Life Destinations Facebook Group, where bloggers share new finds.
     Photographers, share your snapshots in the Second Life Destinations Flickr Group.