Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

JVL
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Three Goblin Art

@theartofmadeline
Misplaced Lens Cap

JBB: An Artblog!
wallacepolsom
todays bird
Xuebing Du
One Nice Bug Per Day
Sweet Seals For You, Always

tannertan36
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

Kaledo Art
No title available

Andulka
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
trying on a metaphor
Jules of Nature

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Singapore

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
@denimesp
27 increíbles fotografías sobre la extrema contaminación China
1. Una barcaza de pescadores se abre paso entre las aguas llenas de algas en Hefei, provincia de Anhui.
2. Una periodista toma una muestra de agua contaminada en el río Jianhe.
3. Mujer caminado entre la nube de polución de las calles de Pekín, donde los niveles de humo superan 40 veces la norma de seguridad marcada por la OMS.
4. Un niño bebe agua de la canalización publica en Fuyuan, provincia de Yunnan.
5. Falso Skyline para realizar fotos turísticas.
6. Operario limpia el pescado muerto del lago Wuhan, provincia central de Hubei.
Read More
Diferenzas lingüísticas dos bloques galegos.
Spark incorporates giant screens into faceted shopping centre facade
Weathered steel sits alongside ageing brickwork at Kew House by Piercy & Company
Weathered steel sits alongside ageing brickwork at Kew House by Piercy & Company
Rather than design a run-of-the-mill skyscraper for a hotel in China, architects 3Gatti decided to put lots of smaller buildings on a gigantic set of shelves
Chocolate appears to be dripping down the walls at this chocolate bar in Poland, by interior designers Bro.Kat
Lavaflow 5 – Bennett / Yeo House | Craig Steely Architecture
Location: Hamakua Coast, Big Island, Hawaii, USA
"The remoteness of the site, our desire for large open expanses, and a commitment to build sustainably led us to investigate prefabrication in steel as a method of construction. We began to research standard prefabrication systems available but all seemed clumsy and lacking the refinement we desired. So working closely with our structural engineer, we designed and developed a bolt together structural system based on 8"x8" wide flange beams that enabled broad spans of steel framing while retaining the elegance of scale we had envisioned."
Lavaflow 5 – Bennett / Yeo House | Craig Steely Architecture
Location: Hamakua Coast, Big Island, Hawaii, USA
Haus O by Peter Ruge Architekten
The façades play with the contrast of open and closed dependent upon the surrounding site and views.
SODEA House by VMX Architects
The concept started with views of the landscape, the distant high buildings and aeroplanes flying over the site.
Perched on a clifftop along the Chilean shoreline, this idyllic residence forms part of a self-sustaining community that produces its own energy and water, and deals with its own waste
This railway service facility in Zurich features a three-dimensional patterned facade made from zigzagging cement modules
A skin of chestnut shingles covers the facade of this multipurpose building at a school in the French town of Hostens
Mjölk House | Studio Junction
Location: Toronto, ON, Canada
It is an unusual school in an unusual location and is run by an unusual teacher.
Rajesh Kumar is a shopkeeper by profession but spends hours every morning teaching around 80 children from the poorest of the poor in India’s capital.
The 43-year-old visited the construction of the Delhi transit station a few years ago and was disturbed by the sight of many children playing at the site instead of attending school.
When he questioned the parents working at the sites they all said there were no schools in the vicinity and no one cared.
Consequently, his open-air class room was born - between pillars and beneath the tracks of the Delhi transit system, known as the Metro.
Every few minutes a train passes above, the children unperturbed by its sounds.
There are no chairs or tables and the children sit on rolls of polystyrene foam placed on the rubble.
Three rectangular patches of wall are painted black and used as a blackboard.
Anonymous donors have contributed cardigans, books, shoes and stationery for the children, as their parents cannot afford them.
One unnamed individual sends a bag full of biscuits and fruit juice for the pupils every day - another incentive for the children to turn up for their studies.