Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
Thumbs and Ammo posits the idea: would it be funny to replace guns with thumbs up in stills from movies?
YES!
”Leaves of Grass” is series from Canadian artist Geoffrey Farmer of clippings and photographs from the American Life magazine, each turned into a functional puppet.
Travel and adventure photographer, Chris Mclennan has taken these truly terrifying photos of great white sharks breaching.
According to Wikipedia:
Seal Island is a small land mass located 5.7 km off the northern beaches of False Bay, near Cape Town, in South Africa. The island is so named because of the great number of Cape Fur Seals that occupy it. There are a few sea birds as well. It is an outcrop of the Cape granite and rises no more than about six metres above the high tide mark. The island is long and narrow- 800 metres by 50 metres. There is no vegetation or soil of any significance. A radar mast was built on the island during World War II by a crew who lived in prefabricated huts for the duration of the construction but this tower gradually succumbed to corrosion and was blown over in a winter storm in 1970. All that remains of it is rusty, twisted metal. There are the ruins of a few huts and other structures from the sealing and guano-collection era (first half of the 20th century). Some rock inscriptionsmade by sealers in the 1930s are still evident.
The dense population of fur seals at certain times of the year attracts the seal's main predator, the Great White Shark. Seal Island provides unique opportunities for those who wish to observe attacks by White Sharks on Cape Fur Seal and to observe social interactions amongst both species. The island is well known for the interesting way the sharks grab their prey: They come up from underneath and literally launch themselves out of the water with the seal in their mouth. It has been shown that if the seals enter the "Ring of Death" (where the sharks circle the island) on the surface instead of at the murky bottom, they will be picked off by the faster and more aggressive Great White.
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"Another incredible set of jaws on a great white shark near Seal Island, False Bay, South Africa. This is one of nature's marvels and was really a sight to behold! Let's hope that these incredible creatures will survive
for generations to come. This shark was attacking a seal decoy being towed behind the boat. The action happens so fast and without warning that it is very easy to miss... The decoy is used by researchers to study the Great White's unique feeding behavior in False Bay. I chose to lie on the deck of the boat shooting out the open transom to get the low angle."
NY-based artist who originally hails from Kanazawa, Saeri Kiritani is the winners of the National Portrait Gallery’s 2013 portrait competition.
From the Introduction to the National Portrait Gallery’s 2013 portrait competition:
"Artists know that a portrait can communicate much more than a likeness. Personal identity, cultural differences, illusory moments can be captured through portraits. Portraits are created in a dizzying variety of media, including painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, video and other time-based media, even images based on individual DNA."
Uploaded by Mark Barnes on 2013-02-26.
I didn't know this was a thing... but with the coming drone wars.... makes sense.
For his new project: “Rap Quotes,” artist Jay Shells made official-looking street signs quoting famous rap lyrics that refer to specific locations in NYC, and placed the signs there.
Article: animalnewyork.com/2013/jay-shells-rap-quotes Youtube: youtube.com/user/animalnewyork Vimeo: vimeo.com/animalnewyork/videos
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Irving Harper was the director of design at George Nelson Associates in the 1960s and is known for designing the Marshmallow Sofa for Herman Miller. He was also an artist working in paper. His work is showcased in Irving Harper Works in Paper.
Via Rizzoli:
Encompassing influences as diverse as Picasso, Egyptian hieroglyphs, the art of Oceana and Africa, the architecture of Paris, and the American beech tree that shades the Rye, New York home he has lived in for over 50 years, the artist’s private meditations reveal an informed aesthetic consciousness expressing itself as pure joy. Harper’s private work delivers on the promise of modernism: humble materials elevated by brilliant design and craftsmanship, and integrating the natural world to create objects in a universally understood language.
From Wikipedia:
"The Manpupuner rock formations (Man-Pupu-Nyer; Мань-Пупу-нёр) or the Seven Strong Men Rock Formations or Poles of the Komi Republic are a set of 7 gigantic abnormally shaped stone pillars located north of the Ural mountains in the Troitsko-Pechorsky District of the Komi Republic. These monoliths are around 30 to 42 m high and jut out of a hilly plateau formed through the weathering effects of ice and winds."
"According to a local legend, the stone pillars were once an entourage of Samoyeds giants walking through the mountains to Siberia in order to destroy the Vogulsky people. However, upon seeing the holy Vogulsky mountains, the shaman of the giants dropped his drum and the entire team froze into the stone pillars."
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So, apparently when molten hot glass is dropped into a bucket of cold water, it acquires so strange physical properties. Its compression strength (i.e. getting pounded by a hammer) gets many times stronger than normal glass, but its sheer and tensile strength (i.e. breaking of its surface tension through cutting or stretching) gets many many times weaker. In fact the slightest nick can cause it to explode.
Smarter Every Day has the super hi-speed/high-res footage to prove it.
"Goggle Up! Science is about to happen...Share by Tweet: http://bit.ly/YAsk8M Facebook: http://bit.ly/PrinceRupert READ THE ADDITIONAL INFO HERE! (Click "Show More"!) Please help me justify putting this much time and effort into a video by clicking "LIKE" and SHARING this as much as possible.
Voodoo Chile-Jimi Hendrix / Gayageum ver. by Luna Thank you and Happy new year~
Here is Luna Lee playing her version of Jimi Hendrix's Voodoo Child on the gayageum.
DISCLAIMER: (All images and music are copyrighted by their respective copyright owners.) English: Hi everyone! This is my favorite rock song - Voodoo Child! Please like this video and suscribe! =) My channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/TotusManus Bye! Français: Salut tout le monde! C'est mon morceaux de rock favoris - Voodoo Child!
From wikipedia:
The gayageum or kayagum is a traditional Korean zither-like string instrument, with 12 strings, although more recently variants have been constructed with 21 or other numbers of strings. It is probably the best known traditional Korean musical instrument.
It is related to other Asian instruments, including the Chinese guzheng, the Japanese koto, the Mongolian yatga, and the Vietnamese đàn tranh.
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Sound has a special place in our array of senses... often the passage of time is marked by sound (drumbeat, clock tick, cicada, footsteps). So Soundtransit.nl (while almost entirely outmoded by SoundCloud) has in its libraries magical time and space travel technology. Here are some of my favorites.
Flamenco in a park in Sevilla, Espana
Ole Ole at a Football match in San Sebastian
Near Yang-ming Shan in Taipei
Seafood Market in Taiwan
Accordian in Den Hague
Capoeira in the Cape Verde Islands
Music for the Barong Dance in Bali
Midday Prayer in Cairo
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At the AIPAD Photography Show in New York from April 4 to 7, American photographer Jeffrey Milstein will show a collection from his ongoing ‘AirCraft: The Jet as Art‘ series 2013.
Large-scale photos of the planes shot at the instant when the aircraft was overhead.
“They are an attempt to share my sense of wonder. Watching a mammoth Boeing 747 gracefully gliding overhead on the way to touch down never ceases to amaze me, but they are also a meditation on how technology can be a double-edged sword when things go wrong” says Jeffrey.
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I have just been 4 weeks in Patagonia with my very good friend Stine. We have been trekking a lot, walked on such a variety of different surfaces throw all kinds of beautiful nature scenes. We have trekked the circuit around Torres Del Paine in Chile, the Cerro Fitz Roy trip in Argentina and one day on the Glacier Perito Moreno. What a fantastic place, so much space to discover..... Ps: The two guys in the ending is Stefan & Christian, both from Germany. Filmed on Nikon D800 with the 24-70mm 2,8 and the 70-200mm 2,8VR Music: Efterklang- Cutting ice to snow Enjoy
Torres Del Paine in Chile, the Cerro Fitz Roy trip in Argentina and the Glacier Perito Moreno.
Stunning.
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Every day, millions of people check in on Foursquare. We took a year's worth of check-ins in New York City and Tokyo and plotted them on a map. Each dot represents a single check-in, while the straight lines link sequential check-ins. What you can see here represents the power of check-in data -- on Foursquare, every city around the world pulses with activity around places every hour of every day. Related: Also see our data visualization of four days worth of Foursquare check-ins in New York CIty during Hurricane Sandy (and the subsequent power outage) during October 2012: http://vimeo.com/52883962.
Each dot represents a check-in during this 96 hour period. Super fascinating to see the different types of check-ins ripple across the city as time of day effects the rhythm of all of these individuals in a fairly regular pattern.
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Uploaded by maztercray42 on 2013-03-21.
This video from Taiwan... yeah, that'll do it.
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Sean King, a Hawaii-based photographer dares to shoot the lava flows in Hawaii, getting uncomfortably close to temperatures of 2000°F.
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Some behind-the-scenes footage in this very strange place... More on http://www.StuckInCustoms.com. The actual name of this place is the Wonderland Amusement Park Chenzhuang Village, Nankou Town, Changping district. 昌平区南口镇陈庄村
Trey Ratcliff has a little series where he walks through his process for taking some of his often lauded photos. Here he trudges through an abanodoned amusement park outside of Beijing... creepy and awesome.
And while you're at it, check out his behind the scenes from his shot on the Great Wall below.
To see post-processing info, visit the tutorial at http://www.StuckInCustoms.com/hdr-tutorial/ . This video has some behind-the-scenes footage of a mountainous remote part of the wall in the far north of China.
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We've featured the ICE OF LAKE BAIKAL before, but here are the shards of crystal clear ice that the enormous pressure thrusts up from the surface.
From Wikipedia:
Lake Baikal is the world's oldest lake, at 25 million years. Located in the south of the Russian region of Siberia, between Irkutsk Oblast to the northwest and the Buryat Republic to the southeast, it is the most voluminous freshwater lake in the world, containing roughly 20% of the world's unfrozen surface fresh water.
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Please like my page to follow my stuff: http://www.facebook.com/JokkeSommerOfficial Ludovic and I doing a wingsuit flight into Rio de Janeiro. We did not have permission to fly into the city, but to respect the commercial air traffic we did the jump 05:45 in the morning.
Crazy, stupid, illegal and badass-- Jokke Summer and Ludovic Woerth jumped from two ultralight planes and flew through a narrow gap in a building in Rio de Janeiro.
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Danish photographer Morten Koldby has this stunningly beautiful series of animal portraits.