Over the years, the Star Wars saga makes the cover of Time magazine.
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One Nice Bug Per Day

Product Placement

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Kiana Khansmith
Jules of Nature

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Claire Keane
Cosimo Galluzzi

oozey mess

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Kaledo Art
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Cosmic Funnies
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@explosionimminent-blog
Over the years, the Star Wars saga makes the cover of Time magazine.
I folded this miniature senbazuru, or 1,000 paper cranes over the last couple of years. It’s for sale here, on my Etsy page!
"Heroine Make" Super WP Mascaras
Heroine Make is legend among many of us Asian beauty bloggers because it’s one of those Japanese brands that makes eyeliners and mascaras that are virtually “bullet-proof”.
The mascaras have recently been updated and I just put them to the test. Heroine Make mascaras are famously/infamously hard to remove. WP means Waterproof, and they’re not kidding. You need an oil cleanser or a bifacil remover to remove these. Bioderma is NOT going to do the trick. They are tear, perspiration, water, and sebum resistant.
The “Long & Curl” Super WP Mascara Flash-Review
Contains 5mm fibres to extend lashes; they do lengthen lashes and give a very clean and natural look, but if you don’t work fast, you DO get some tiny clumps along the length of the lashes.
Curved brush allows you to easily reach corner lashes, and also helps you to lift and curl your lashes during application.
Formula holds curl very well. I did not curl my lashes before use and the mascara managed to lift them.
Expect clean fine length.
The “Volume & Curl” Super WP Mascara Flash-Review
Formulated with a special thickening powder to coat each lash for extra thickness. They DEFINITELY thicken, but you also get more noticeable clumps with this if you try to layer it.
Conical bristly brush grabs lots of lashes to deposit mascara quite evenly.
This formula doesn’t curl quite as well as the Long & Curl formula, but it definitely gives length even though that’s not one of the promises.
Expect drama.
Cons?
Both can’t be layered. Or rather, you can layer them but they will probably turn into clumpy messes. The polymers set and dry, and unlike non-waterproof mascaras, the first coat doesn’t soften or dissolve when you apply a second.
They are also a serious pain to remove - literally - without some sort of oil in your remover. But that means it’s good for those of you who have runny eyes or oily lids and get mascara smudges all the time.
Conclusion?
I’d say my money’s on the Volume & Curl. You can see that it gives both volume AND length, and the brush also reaches and coats more lashes, so you look like you have a lot more. You definitely get much more NOTICEABLE lashes overall, and I’d actually say it’s a good all-rounder whether you want length or volume.
Long & Curl is cleaner and subtler, but I know you girls. The bigger and fluffier the better.
Mobile sauna on the Oregon Coast.
Contributed by Chris Lodore
Various Angles of Nebula NGC 3603
In this stunning picture of the giant galactic nebula NGC 3603, the crisp resolution of NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope captures various stages of the life cycle of stars in one single view.
To the upper left of center (middle image) is the evolved blue supergiant called Sher 25. The star has a unique circumstellar ring of glowing gas that is a galactic twin to the famous ring around the supernova 1987A. The grayish-bluish color of the ring and the bipolar outflows (blobs to the upper right and lower left of the star) indicates the presence of processed (chemically enriched) material.
In these images (right edge for the top, center for the middle, and left edge for the bottom) is a so-called starburst cluster dominated by young, hot Wolf-Rayet stars and early O-type stars. A torrent of ionizing radiation and fast stellar winds from these massive stars has blown a large cavity around the cluster.
The most spectacular evidence for the interaction of ionizing radiation with cold molecular-hydrogen cloud material are the giant gaseous pillars to the right and lower left of the cluster. These pillars are sculptured by the same physical processes as the famous pillars Hubble photographed in the M16 Eagle Nebula.
Dark clouds at the upper right (bottom image) are so-called Bok globules, which are probably in an earlier stage of star formation.
To the lower left of the cluster are two compact, tadpole-shaped emission nebulae. Similar structures were found by Hubble in Orion, and have been interpreted as gas and dust evaporation from possibly protoplanetary disks (proplyds). The “proplyds” in NGC 3603 are 5 to 10 times larger in size and correspondingly also more massive.
This single view nicely illustrates the entire stellar life cycle of stars, starting with the Bok globules and giant gaseous pillars, followed by circumstellar disks, and progressing to evolved massive stars in the young starburst cluster. The blue supergiant with its ring and bipolar outflow marks the end of the life cycle.
Credit: NASA/Hubble/Wolfgang Brandner (JPL/IPAC), Eva K. Grebel (Univ. Washington), You-Hua Chu (Univ. Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
Realized I never uploaded this! This was my piece for “Sing that Movie” at Susanita’s Little Gallery. Acrylic on cold press watercolor paper.