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!
Finnish paper artist Janna Syvänoja (http://www.jannasyvanoja.com ) uses printed paper, maps, catalogues and phone books to create her work
Syvänoja: "I can make the rules, but the piece takes the shape of its own. When certain formed components start to follow each other and find their rhythm in my hands, the miracle happens."
via Junk Culture http://5thin.gs/1ev3sIc
Kawah Ijen, East Java, Indonesia, is a part of a group of stratovolcanoes, connected to a rich vein of sulfur (a vein mined by painstaking hand) that expresses itself both in a startlingly blue lake and in these bright blue liquid sulfur flames.
Photographer Olivier Grunewald took these amazing photos in 2008. He lost two lenses and a camera in the process. He had to wear a gasmask and had to get rid of all the clothes we wore during the shoot.
via Oddity Central http://5thin.gs/1kslgv7
The festival in the city of Sapporo on Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, the Sapporo Snow Festival has been taking place since the early '80s and attracting millions of visitors.
via Beautiful Decay http://5thin.gs/1d0ljse
Hard to believe this is a yacht.
A 90-meter superyacht, Jazz, designed by Zaha Hadid with German shipbuilders Blohm+Voss, part of Hadid's Unique Circle Yachts.
via My Modern Met http://5thin.gs/1d0hsvt
Between NASA, Hubble Heritage and the European Space Agency, 2013 has seen some amazing space photography.
via Fubiz http://5thin.gs/KyBX7u
Russian artist Stanislav Aristov in his series “Спички” (Russian for “matchsticks”). He contorts the sticks as they burn, and then shoots the flame and smoke with a macro lens. He finishes the images in photoshop.
Aristov:
“I was playing with a pack of matches while I was deciding what to photograph for a competition. It was while I was watching the match that I began to think of how it represents life. There is the burnt part representing the past, the smoke of memories left and the untouched part of the match the future.”
Via Feel Desain http://5thin.gs/1dwAI00
Gerco de Ruijter attaches a camera to a kite to get these close-up aerial shots.
See also Kite Aerial Photography - Intimate and Amazing Shots from Above »
via Fubiz http://5thin.gs/19XDDRy
Aktsaal der Wiener Akademie (1787, Martin Ferdinand Quadal)
An amazing collection of decollage, with wit and skill from Parisian Nicolas Monterrat at Un léger décalage.
See also Renaissance & Pop Art Mashed Together by Marco Battaglini »
French photographer David Keochkerian creates these other worldly landscapes with Infrared filtering.
via MashKulture
David Dope is a creative director who makes these stunningly hypnotic GIFs in his spare time.
By Rusty Squid:
Book Hive is an interactive sculpture created to celebrate the 400 year anniversary of Bristol Libraries, and it will ultimately feature 400 animatronic books. Large wooden structures awash with honey light will engulf visitors in an immersive and atmospheric environment, where life-like animated books, inhabiting the cells will physically engage visitors, reacting to their movements in the space. Book Hive is a three month project, where the public gets the opportunity to influence its development. Rusty Squid will observe the public’s behaviour, and with the assistance of the Book Hive Keepers (exhibition stewards), collect feedback, in order to transform the shape of the hive and the way that the books respond. This evolution will take place over two months, between December and February, with the full 400 books installed by 7th February 2014.
Photographers Pierre Javelle and Akiko Ida have found a fun and funny visual language in MINIMIAM, a wordplay combining 'miniature' and “yummy” (miam in French).
Ida says:
“We’re both food photographer in our daily work, and we’re both quite crazy about cooking, eating and everything about food. So when we started this small people series, naturally we created the stories related to the food.”
Russia photographer Murad Osmann follows his beautiful girlfriend all around the globe in creating this fun, sexy and stylish a series he aptly titled “Follow Me To.”
Osmann:
“For me photography is about capturing things other people might miss. It’s a way to communicate.”
Wei Gensheng is working on the second highest building in the world – the Shanghai Tower. His stunning photos from 2,000 ft up won him the second prize in Shanghai City Photography Competition.
Karla Mialynne’s work created using Prismacolor pencils, Pantone Tria markers and occasionally, acrylic paint.
Josh Lane created his Hero-Glyphics series, placing comic book characters (the X-men, Spiderman, the Avengers) and sci-fi (Star Trek) heroes in Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics.
Barcelona-based artist Paolo Curio makes these awesome coin carvings known as ‘Hobo Nickels’.
From the University of Tokyo and the Nagoya Institute of Technology, three engineers revealed a machine using sound waves to move objects through space in a controlled way, using four speakers to create intersecting soundwaves.