Front Doorway
A worn brass welcome plate glints on the doorframe as guests cross the threshold.
On the front doorframe, a brass welcome plate glints as guests cross.
Helps you remember · welcome plate = “thank you for coming”
Kitchens, schools, streets, gardens, stages, stations and rooms.
Read-only demo — this is what places cues feel like. Create your own speech to edit, practise and export.
“Thank you for coming. Our river is choking on plastic. We can change that in three steps: carry a reusable bottle, join one clean-up each month, and teach every child to leave the park better than they found it. If we start today, by summer we will see fish where we now see rubbish.”
A worn brass welcome plate glints on the doorframe as guests cross the threshold.
On the front doorframe, a brass welcome plate glints as guests cross.
Helps you remember · welcome plate = “thank you for coming”
The kitchen sink coughs up a plastic bottle from the plughole.
In the kitchen sink, a plastic bottle coughs up from the plughole.
Helps you remember · kitchen sink = your “river”, bottle = the plastic choking it
A steel flask stands proud on the counter shelf where paper cups used to live.
On the kitchen counter shelf, a steel flask replaces the paper cups.
Helps you remember · counter shelf = the object’s new home = “reusable bottle”
The lounge sofa has twelve fluorescent vests folded on it, one per month.
On the lounge sofa, twelve fluorescent vests are folded, one per month.
Helps you remember · twelve vests on the sofa = “clean-up each month”
The school gate at the garden edge is where a child stops to pick up litter.
At the school gate, a child pauses to pocket a piece of litter before class.
Helps you remember · school gate = “teach every child”, litter = “leave the park better”
The garden pond by the back wall glints with a silver fish where a bag once floated.
At the back-wall garden pond, a silver fish glints in clear water.
Helps you remember · garden pond = the future river, fish = “see fish” by summer