he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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$LAYYYTER
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@goodturtle
Each year, thousands of birds, fish and turtles ingest or become trapped in plastic waste. This brewing company is giving six packs new life.
Clearing debris off the beach can increase the number of sea turtle nests by as much as 200 percent, a new study shows.
Not So Fun Fact For World Turtle Day:
Turtles and tortoises are the most endangered group of vertebrate animals on the planet. Over half of all the chelonian species in the world are threatened with extinction.
These animals watched the dinosaurs come and go and now they may leave this planet forever mostly because we like to eat them, collect their shells, take them from the wild as pets, and hit them with our cars.
Please support turtle conservation.
Exotic Glass Turtle Pendant, made with gold, silver & caramel color glass! Add one to your family, from https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/CreativeFlowGlass
The bold expressive colors of Moe Booker’s “Just Jazz” are experienced daily by the LIRR commuters at the Wyandanch parking facility. To see Brooker’s work on a smaller scale than the 48 ft. hand painted glass panels, an exhibition of his recent paintings, “Unspeakable Joy”, is opening tonight 5/26 at June Kelly Gallery in Soho. See you there!
Welcoming Royal Hawaiian Featherwork to LACMA
LACMA has been given an unexpected opportunity to host an additional exhibition this year: Royal Hawaiian Featherwork: Na Hulu Ali‘i proved to be an irresistible temptation, even though we had a short eight weeks to plan and install it! Read more about the exhibition and its installation process on Unframed: http://bit.ly/1TCv3NO
“Throughout those centuries of breeding canaries, one color remained elusive—red. The birds traversed the rainbow, but no hint of red had ever shown up in their feathers. So in the 1920s, German breeders decided to cross canaries with a closely related species—the red siskin of Venezuela. They then mated the hybrids with more canaries, selecting offspring with red feathers, but as few other siskin traits as possible. The result, after many generations, was the ‘red-factor canary’—a bird that looks exactly like a typical yellow canary, but with bright red plumes.“ Read the entire story here.
Harvard has a pigment library that stores old pigment sources, like the ground shells of now-extinct insects, poisonous metals, and wrappings from Egyptian mummies, to preserve the origins of the world’s rarest colors.
A few centuries ago, finding a specific color might have meant trekking across the globe to a mineral deposit in the middle of Afghanistan. “Every pigment has its own story,” Narayan Khandekar, the caretaker of the pigment collection, told Fastcodesign. He also shared the stories of some of the most interesting pigments in the collection.
Mummy Brown
“People would harvest mummies from Egypt and then extract the brown resin material that was on the wrappings around the bodies and turn that into a pigment. It’s a very bizarre kind of pigment, I’ve got to say, but it was very popular in the 18th and 19th centuries.”
Cadmium Yellow
“Cadmium yellow was introduced in the mid 19th century. It’s a bright yellow that many impressionists used. Cadmium is a heavy metal, very toxic. In the early 20th century, cadmium red was introduced. You find these pigments used in industrial processes. Up until the 1970s, Lego bricks had cadmium pigment in them.”
Annatto “The lipstick plant—a small tree, Bixa orellana, native to Central and South America—produces annatto, a natural orange dye. Seeds from the plant are contained in a pod surrounded with a bright red pulp. Currently, annatto is used to color butter, cheese, and cosmetics.”
Lapis Lazuli “People would mine it in Afghanistan, ship it across Europe, and it was more expensive than gold so it would have its own budget line on a commission.”
Dragon’s Blood “It has a great name, but it’s not from dragons. [The bright red pigment] is from the rattan palm.”
Cochineal “This red dye comes from squashed beetles, and it’s used in cosmetics and food.”
Emerald Green “This is made from copper acetoarsenite. We had a Van Gogh with a bright green background that was identified as emerald green. Pigments used for artists’ purposes can find their way into use in other areas as well. Emerald green was used as an insecticide, and you often see it on older wood that would be put into the ground, like railroad ties.”
Source
Amazing
We’ve all got both light and dark inside us. What matters is the part we choose to act on. That’s who we really are.
J.K. Rowling (via quotemadness)
Comment: punugoods said “| LAST DAYS IN SENEGAL : FOOD SHOPPING, BISSAP |"
Welcome Back!
Some African vibes today. I cooked a “Mafé” a dish from Senegal. I tasted it for the first time last week at one of my friend birthday (hi Emeline!), it was delicious af. It is basically a beef stew. The recipe include peanut butter (yes, peanut butter), onions, tomato sauce, garlic, carrots (optional) and beef broth. It is usually served with with rice.
Nasi Diam Bari!
Forests in Senegal's lush Casamance region risk disappearing within two years because of illegal timber smuggling, one of the West African country's foremost environmentalists said on Thursday.
From the article:
Forests in Senegal’s lush Casamance region risk disappearing within two years because of illegal timber smuggling, one of the West African country’s foremost environmentalists said on Thursday.
Casamance in southern Senegal contains the country’s last remaining forests, an area of 30,000 hectares (74,000 acres) that could be depleted by 2018 as smugglers feed the demand for rosewood furniture in China, said former environment minister Haidar El Ali.
Exporting timber from Senegal is illegal, so traffickers smuggle it to neighboring Gambia for shipping to China.
Read more.
#GalsenHipster
Tendance Accessoires #Decouverte
la marque Be Jolie #Senegal #Mode
Link ici: https://web.facebook.com/Be-Joulie-1695547340718765/timeline