Cabin 17 I wrote Cabin 17 for a school assignment where we were to use three different points of view to describe a person, a place or an event. I chose to describe a cabin to see a rendered view of the cabin (it's not the greatest but I tried) Click Here
Upon entering cabin seventeen’s main room directly to your left you’ll see a kitchen, and further back a game area with table tennis and pool. Included are shelves filled with all kinds of games and puzzles, which are worked or played at the two tables and chairs in the middle of the room. In the back right corner there’s a media area with big screen television, surrounding the screen are six brightly colored couches, each standing out amongst the black surroundings. In the front right corner a computer lab with sixteen desks and computers. Between the couches and desks is a doorway directly across the room from another doorway. Going through either doorway and climbing the stairs you’ll enter either the boys’ or girls’ room. Each room contains four bunk beds, eight dressers, three loaded bookcases, three couches and a coffee table. At either end of the rooms are the washrooms.
As I entered cabin seventeen I stopped in awe of all the fascinating electronics. The media area centered around a 60-inch plasma HDTV. There was also a home theater system, a 300 disc DVD/CD changer, a Blu-ray disc player, and a Nintendo Wii. In the corner were shelves filled with games and movies for all tastes. The computer area was equipped with sixteen elite media center pcs with Intel Core 2 Quad processor, each loaded with the latest software for photo editing, web page building, program writing and games of all sorts. Each of the computers had a 24-inch widescreen monitor, a state of the art webcam, and all-in-one photo printer, copier, and scanner. Each camper was equipped with a Sony 12.1 Cyber-Shot digital camera, an iPod Shuffle, and a Garmin eTrex Legend GPS unit. The camera and GPS unit were for the scavenger hunts they were sending us on.
Upon opening the door to cabin seventeen, the first thing I noticed were the colors. In the media area were six couches; rouge, violet, mango, fern, sunflower, and blueberry. The couches stood out against the black carpet, walls and ceiling. The chairs at the computer desks and around the tables in the middle of the room were upholstered in the same bright colors. I couldn’t wait to see upstairs if downstairs was this bright and colorful. The boys’ room had true blue walls and carpet with four bunk beds along one side of the room. The bedding was in the same bright blueberry, violet, and fern as downstairs. There were also three couches blueberry, violet, and fern. The girls’ side was similar to boys’, but they turned the color temperature up. The walls and carpet were fire engine red with bedding and couches in rouge, mango and sunflower.
November 2007