New print.
Discernible Threat
Lino-cut on recycled paper.
Check it out HERE.
Wolves have killed one person in the past 100 years in North America.
Cops murdered 1,139 people in 2015 alone.
Who’s the real threat?
Misplaced Lens Cap
h
we're not kids anymore.
taylor price
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Not today Justin
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins

@theartofmadeline
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Origami Around

pixel skylines
Claire Keane

No title available
RMH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

★
$LAYYYTER

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia

seen from Germany

seen from Algeria
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@el-ultimo-aliento
New print.
Discernible Threat
Lino-cut on recycled paper.
Check it out HERE.
Wolves have killed one person in the past 100 years in North America.
Cops murdered 1,139 people in 2015 alone.
Who’s the real threat?
Trying to open a portal to the birb dimension
ᚦᚲ:ᛗᚨᚾᛁ:ᚷᛟᛚᛁᛞᚨ | ÞK:MĀNI:GŌLIDA | THE MOON GREETS YOU moornebheym, 2017 www.moornebheym.de - facebook - instagram - prints
THIS HAMMER SMASHES FASCISTS by Anius
I will never not reblog a post of that kind! Our responsibility as heathens is to make the world a better place for us and our loved ones. Fascism has no place in such a world.
In the face of fascism, yield no quarter!
nearly finished the bathroom. just some doorhandles an the light installation.
This defines me perfectly
Vintage Aqualand Wisconsin Souvenir Salt and Pepper Shakers
(more information, more etsy gold)
This is a thing of beauty - the vintage 19th-century tool chest of master carpenter and free & accepted mason H.O. Studley. If the workmanship in the tool chest is any indication of the maker’s talent, then the craftsmanship of Studley must have been a wonder to behold. Massachusetts piano maker Henry Studley built his magnificent tool chest over the course of a 30-year career at the Poole Piano Company. The chest lived on the wall near his workbench, and he worked on it regularly, making changes and adding new tools as he acquired them. Using ebony, mother-of-pearl, ivory, rosewood, and mahogany – all materials used in the manufacture of pianos – he refined the chest to the point that now, more than 80 years after his death, it remains in a class of its own.
Packing more tools per square foot than seems physically possible, piano maker Henry Studley’s unrivaled tool chest also manages to be beautiful in the process. The chest stands as perhaps the most exquisite example of 19th-century tool-chest craftsmanship.
Considering how many tools it holds, the famous chest is really quite small; when closed, it is just 9 in. deep, 39 in. high, and just more than 18 in. wide. Yet it houses so many tools - some 300 - so densely packed that three strong men strain to lift it.
For every tool, Studley fashioned a holder to keep it in place and to showcase it. Miniature wrenches, handmade saws, and some still unidentified piano-making tools each have intricate inlaid holders. Tiny clasps rotate out of the way so a tool can be removed. Almost lost among the tools but no longer obscure to history, the name of the maker, H. O. Studley, and his Massachusetts hometown of Quincy are engraved on small plates just above his brace. Scraps of ebony, ivory, rosewood, and mother-of-pearl left over from his work as a piano maker gave Studley raw material for his tool chest and many of the tools it contains. In places the clearances are so tight that the tools nearly touch. The chest, which hangs on ledgers secured to a wall, folds closed like a book. And as the chest is closed, tools protruding from the left side nestle into spaces between tools on the right side. Amazingly, despite being so densely packed, the tools are all easily accessible.
Studley was well into his 80s when he retired from the piano company. Before he died in 1925, Studley gave the tool chest to a friend. That man’s grandson, Peter Hardwick, loaned the chest to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. in the late 1980s and later sold it to a private collector in the Midwest. That owner again sold the tool chest to another private collector, where it now resides.
* From Fine Woodworking
Burg Eltz.....