Lede
Interest in “drawing house” — the practice of sketching homes by hand or with digital tools — is moving from niche studios into classrooms, hobby circles, and everyday home projects, as educators emphasize visual thinking and software makers simplify design workflows. Architects and teachers say the activity helps people understand how spaces function, while consumer-friendly apps make it easier to translate ideas into basic floor plans and exterior studies. The result is a broader audience engaging with a process once seen as specialized, with implications for design literacy, career pathways, and how communities participate in shaping the built environment.
What “Drawing House” Means Today
Drawing a house can mean several things, from quick pencil sketches of façades to measured floor plans and digital models. In informal contexts, it begins with line, shape, and proportion — a front door centered under a gable, window grids suggested by a few strokes, a roofline that conveys slope and shelter. In more technical settings, it expands to plan, section, and elevation, the trio that shows how rooms relate, how light enters, and how materials meet. Between those poles sit a growing set of tools that help bridge the gap: grid overlays for perspective, template libraries for doors and stairs, and entry-level modeling tools that turn 2D outlines into simple 3D forms.
Step 3: File the DS01 and pay the fee
When you’re ready, complete form DS01 (the strike off application). You can do it online or by post; online is faster and a bit cheaper. You’ll need the company number, registered name, and the usual contact details. A majority of the directors must sign; if you have a sole director, they sign alone. Make sure the registered office address is able to receive post for several months—even if you’re using a service address—because Gazette notices and any objections will be sent there. Pay the small filing fee (currently around £8 online or £10 by post). Keep copies of everything you submit along with the date you filed. Pro tip: avoid informal trading after filing. Only activities that are strictly necessary to close the company are permitted. If you accidentally issue a new invoice or sign a fresh contract, you may invalidate eligibility and should withdraw and re‑file later. Once submitted, Companies House will email or post confirmation and schedule the first Gazette notice.
Step 4: Notify people and watch the Gazette
Within seven days of filing DS01, you must send a copy of the application to “interested parties”: all shareholders, creditors, employees, managers or trustees of any pension scheme, and any director who did not sign. This is a legal requirement—skipping it can cause objections or delays. Then, keep an eye on the Gazette (the official public record). Companies House will publish a proposal to strike the company off; there’s a minimum two‑month window during which anyone can object. Objections are most common from HMRC if returns or taxes are outstanding, from banks or landlords over unpaid balances, or from counterparties to unsettled disputes. During this window, maintain a mail forward, check email diligently, and respond quickly to any inquiries. If no valid objections land, Companies House will publish a second Gazette notice confirming dissolution and remove the company from the register. Mark that date—post‑dissolution steps hinge on it, and assets left behind may vest to the Crown immediately.
The Pecan Waffle Is Still The Icon
There is a reason the pecan waffle lives rent-free in so many late-night memories: it nails texture and balance. The batter cooks to a crisp, golden lattice, and the toasted pecans add just enough buttery crunch to keep each bite interesting. A swipe of butter, a slow pour of syrup, and you have sweet without sliding into candy territory. If you like it extra crisp, ask for your waffle well-done; if you prefer a soft center, keep it standard.
The Reagan Show (2017)
If Our Nixon is about unraveling, The Reagan Show is about the performance—and the discipline behind it. Made almost entirely from archival footage, it spotlights a presidency that truly understood television. You watch the White House operate like a Hollywood set at times: advance teams staging perfect vistas, staff calibrating every camera angle, and a media-savvy leader leaning into myth-making while handling high-stakes diplomacy. The film is witty without being dismissive, and it invites you to examine the line between storytelling and statesmanship. It also highlights how image can be strategy, not just ornament—especially in the Cold War, where perception shaped leverage. For anyone curious about modern media politics, this documentary offers a foundational case study. It pairs nicely with more process-heavy films on this list; after seeing how policy is built, watch how it is packaged, sold, and remembered. You will never look at a Rose Garden photo-op the same way again.