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The funny thing is that some medieval bricklayer made a conscious choice here, he could have put that brick paw-print down and made a flawless floor. Now, here we are getting a chuckle out of some unknown bricklayer's little gag centuries later.
98 1 ReplyI’m also wondering if those are not fake prints. They look pretty deep. I don’t think a cat walking on drying bricks would leave such deep marks.
To me they look like easter eggs left by the brick layer.
53 0 ReplyMaybe they're deep because of water erosion from rains over a thousand years, those bricks look pretty polished.
24 3 ReplyI don't think the bricks are that old. Maybe a few hundred years or so
12 1 ReplyAlso, wouldn't water erosion make them less deep not more, due to generally smoothing the stone?
9 1 ReplyMaybe water pools in them long after it dries out on the surrounding brick, but whether still water still erodes stone I don't know.
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It's possible. I have paw prints of varying size and pressure in the concrete around my house (thanks cat).
The ones from super wet concrete look almost like a duck/goblin footprint, the ones in drier screed look like those tiles, but much less deep.
12 1 ReplyAlso like, this looks like stone, not brick..
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As a cat owner, this doesn't even look like a real print. It's too deep. Most likely a manufactured print done as a gag by whoever made the bricks.
25 1 ReplyThe car walked on the brick before it was burned (the brick).
Like when you put a fork in a cake to check if it's done. The hole will be bigger when it's heated afterwards.
I don't think it's a deliberate prank, just a not my job situation.
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Wouldn't he have needed to change the brick? If you flip it then it wouldn't fit there any more since its shape is asymmetrical.
6 2 ReplyPresumably he shaped the tile after it was fired? I assume.
3 1 ReplyShhhh just let it ride
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