More absolutely stunning photos of the ice breaking up and melting. There’s a slideshow, go see! (Scroll down a bit.)
More absolutely stunning photos of the ice breaking up and melting. There’s a slideshow, go see! (Scroll down a bit.)
At some point between the age when you were accidentally sticking them up your nose and the first time you heard your hip crack, Legos went from being a kids toy to a real tool for creative expression. Today, Legos range from ultra basic to extremely high-tech, and if you’re looking for an excellent example of the latter, look no further than a build commissioned by aerospace and defense contractor Arrow. Arrow’s ad team hired Brazilian designer and Lego genius Arthur Sacek to construct a jaw-dropping Lego robot capable of turning a single sheet of paper into an airplane, and then launching it — a metaphor for Arrow’s own business — and the result is just awesome.
Now to the really neat stuff – building the machine!
Via BGR.
Voting is now open for the Smithsonian Finalists! Go look, and vote, too!
Photos © Dan Kane. All rights reserved.
Check out Photographer Dan Kane, who has some fantastic works, these are from his series Kulisse I, a wonderful juxtaposition of old, abandoned buildings and very nice looking naked people.
Absolutely stunning photos! There’s a slideshow, go look!
Some more of Kestrel’s amazing work: I finished off some tack for someone and got some pics with a new set-up for the background. I’ve set the doll up so he looks like he’s looking for lost cattle here. Will send a couple more of this set, of romal reins, braided headstall, pencil bosal (“bosalito”) with mecate and hanger and spade bit. I’m only showing the bosalito and mecate with hanger, here. The saddle is totally wrong but it’s the only one finished at present.
I think the background works amazingly well, and serves to highlight such beautiful work. Click for full size!
You can see the hand made sterling silver buckle pretty good in this pic. Also you can see the tassel (the vaqueros call it “la mota”).
aaaand here you can see all the gear that a vaquero or buckaroo would use. First the young horse is taught to respond to the bosal, then gradually taught to carry the spade bit, while the rider uses first the mecate reins and then gradually starts using the romal reins.
All images © Kestrel, all rights reserved.
A large crowd marches through New York City in 1937 to demand workers’ rights. Photograph: Bettmann Archive.
Given the ongoing effort to quash all public dissent, and prevent people from protesting, it’s a good reminder to take a glimpse into the past, to see what people do when governments are wrong and out of control. They protest.
The Jarrow marchers pass through the village of Lavendon, near Bedford, in October 1936. Two hundred men walked the 291 miles from Tyneside to London to deliver a petition for jobs to the government. Photograph: Getty Images.
Protesters march on the White House in 1933 to demand a fair trial for the ‘Scottsboro Boys’. This case – in which a group of black teenagers was convicted by an all-white jury of raping a white woman, then sentenced to death – is considered a grave miscarriage of justice. Photograph: Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images.
That’s all I have. Well, snow and some mud, too. Click for full size.
Space Cake! More images and instructions here.
Real Space! © Peter Kurucz. You can see many more amazing photographs here.