hello vonnie
ojovivo
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
almost home

Product Placement
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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Kiana Khansmith
i don't do bad sauce passes

roma★
styofa doing anything

tannertan36

ellievsbear

Discoholic 🪩

Andulka
trying on a metaphor
Claire Keane

PR's Tumblrdome
dirt enthusiast

seen from Malaysia

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seen from United States

seen from United States
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@babyfaceless
Caravaggio, particolare da Medusa
Fish (Keiichi Koike)
Hidden, or disappearing, fore-edge painting is a technique that dates back to the mid 17th century, when London bookbinders began decorating not the flat edge of a text block, but rather the gently fanned edge. Doing so caused the image to appear and vanish depending on how the pages were held. In some cases, as with the views of Boston and Philadelphia above, two different scenes were painted on either side of the fore-edge, so that only the gilt edge is visible until the pages are fanned in one direction or the other.
There’s more about these fore-edge paintings on the From the Stacks blog!
Fore-edge painting of York Cathedral. Thomas and Katharine Macquoid. About Yorkshire. 1894. New-York Historical Society.
Double fore-edge painting of oval views of Hull and Olney, with decorative surrounds. John Scott. The Life of the Rev. Thomas Scott, Rector of Aston Sandford, Bucks. 1836. New-York Historical Society.
Double-fore edge paintings of Boston and Philadelphia. Washington Irving. The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. 1864. New-York Historical Society.
Fore-edge painting of Eton from Windsor Castle. Thomas Gray. Poems and Letters. 1867. New-York Historical Society.
A page from DISCONNECTOR, a sci-fi comic about an inventor and his robot. Special thanks go out to Frank Santoro and Sally Ingraham of the Comics Workbook Rowhouse Residency, where I spent some time working on this project.
Read the whole thing here.
Source
some Black and White artwork by Bruce Timm.
A detail from the Matrix, by Keith Haring, 1983. The entire piece is over 30 foot long, material ink on paper. / Google
Dale Arden and Ming the Merciless by Alex Raymond