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    3 days ago  /  2,990 notes  /  Source: anngreenblog

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    2 weeks ago  /  1,056 notes  /  Source: supersonicelectronic

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    2 weeks ago  /  16,331 notes  /  Source: brain-food

  4. 2headedsnake:

thevisualhag.wordpress.com
Natali Rusanova - If I Will Die

    2headedsnake:

    thevisualhag.wordpress.com

    Natali Rusanova - If I Will Die

    2 weeks ago  /  205 notes  /  Source: thevisualhag.wordpress.com

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    2 weeks ago  /  486 notes  /  Source: glovesh

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    2 weeks ago  /  5,493 notes  /  Source: glovesh

  7. If dreams were houses

    opallynn:

    Read More

    3 weeks ago  /  43 notes  /  Source: opallynn

  8. seabois:

Hairstyles for teenage girls, United States, 1912

    seabois:

    Hairstyles for teenage girls, United States, 1912

    (via yasahime)

    4 weeks ago  /  1,422 notes  /  Source: digitalgallery.nypl.org

  9. mikikoponczeck:

    John Cleese on creativity.

    4 weeks ago  /  355 notes  /  Source: fayren

  10. thestuntkid:

For all you kids out there wanting to give a drawing tablet a try, this looks like a really good option. I just lost my wacom pen, which they’ve decided they don’t make anymore, so i’m likely to buy one of these too.
drawnblog:

Ray Frenden reviews the too-cheap-to-be-true Monoprice graphics tablets. How do they stack up to industry standard Wacoms?

After spending a week with the 6.25“x10” Monoprice, my Yiynova and Cintiq remain unplugged and I gave my Intuos away to a friend. The Monoprice tracks subtle pressure variances and small movements with less lag and more crisp fidelity than any of the others. It is, put crudely, fucking awesome, in both OSX Lion and Windows 7 x64.

    thestuntkid:

    For all you kids out there wanting to give a drawing tablet a try, this looks like a really good option. I just lost my wacom pen, which they’ve decided they don’t make anymore, so i’m likely to buy one of these too.

    drawnblog:

    Ray Frenden reviews the too-cheap-to-be-true Monoprice graphics tablets. How do they stack up to industry standard Wacoms?

    After spending a week with the 6.25“x10” Monoprice, my Yiynova and Cintiq remain unplugged and I gave my Intuos away to a friend. The Monoprice tracks subtle pressure variances and small movements with less lag and more crisp fidelity than any of the others. It is, put crudely, fucking awesome, in both OSX Lion and Windows 7 x64.

    1 month ago  /  7,808 notes  /  Source: frenden.com

  11. 1 month ago  /  125 notes  /  Source: nouveaufindesiecle

  12. 2headedsnake:

photolucida.org
Corinne Vionnet
I created a series of photographic works entitled “Photo Opportunities”,(2010) based on hundreds of snapshots of tourist locations, which I found on the Internet. By collecting and then bringing together successive layers of around a hundred similar “photo souvenirs”, these images conjure up questions about representation and memory of places, underlining the mimetic nature of our visual language.

    2headedsnake:

    photolucida.org

    Corinne Vionnet

    I created a series of photographic works entitled “Photo Opportunities”,(2010) based on hundreds of snapshots of tourist locations, which I found on the Internet. By collecting and then bringing together successive layers of around a hundred similar “photo souvenirs”, these images conjure up questions about representation and memory of places, underlining the mimetic nature of our visual language.

    1 month ago  /  86 notes  /  Source: photolucida.org

  13. 1 month ago  /  44,231 notes  /  Source: 9if

  14. neil-gaiman:

From an Australian News Site:
Stretching from the sunrise to sunset, this 360 degree image was captured by Greek photographer Chris Kotsiopoloulos in Sounio, Greece.
It took him a painstaking 30 hours and hundreds of images to create the amazing time-spanning panorama.



Beginning in the east, Mr Kotsiopoloulos snapped the early morning rays hitting the clouds before clocking the suns path across the sky and then into the night.
He was forced to use a hairdryer to keep the lens of his camera from getting too moist as temperatures dropped to about three degrees Celsius.
“I had to stay in the same place alone for 30 hours in total to get everything right, prepare and take the pictures.
“At night it became even more difficult because I had to keep my eyes open and inspect the camera lens for moisture.
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/stunning-snap-merges-day-and-night/story-e6frfq80-1226331616038#ixzz1sfn4OcOw

    neil-gaiman:

    From an Australian News Site:

    Stretching from the sunrise to sunset, this 360 degree image was captured by Greek photographer Chris Kotsiopoloulos in Sounio, Greece.

    It took him a painstaking 30 hours and hundreds of images to create the amazing time-spanning panorama.

    Beginning in the east, Mr Kotsiopoloulos snapped the early morning rays hitting the clouds before clocking the suns path across the sky and then into the night.

    He was forced to use a hairdryer to keep the lens of his camera from getting too moist as temperatures dropped to about three degrees Celsius.

    “I had to stay in the same place alone for 30 hours in total to get everything right, prepare and take the pictures.

    “At night it became even more difficult because I had to keep my eyes open and inspect the camera lens for moisture.



    Read more: http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/stunning-snap-merges-day-and-night/story-e6frfq80-1226331616038#ixzz1sfn4OcOw

    1 month ago  /  2,539 notes  /  Source: neil-gaiman