culturenlifestyle:
Rejected Broken Porcelain Restored More Beautifully With Gold Lining
Korean artist Yeesookyung fuses mismatched and imperfect porcelain pieces into graceful sculptures. Keep reading
via the design dome
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

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titsay
dirt enthusiast
occasionally subtle
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Keni
KIROKAZE
hello vonnie
tumblr dot com
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

shark vs the universe
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
almost home

Love Begins
sheepfilms
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Kiana Khansmith
Xuebing Du
$LAYYYTER

seen from United States
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@interstitialarts
culturenlifestyle:
Rejected Broken Porcelain Restored More Beautifully With Gold Lining
Korean artist Yeesookyung fuses mismatched and imperfect porcelain pieces into graceful sculptures. Keep reading
via the design dome
When mom isn’t around
Tattoo done by Miryam Lumpini.
This is the first time I’ve seen color tattoos on dark skin that actually look vibrant and pigmented!!!!!
Once I was talking to a dark skinned lady who told me that she was jealous of my pasty skin because she wants color tattoos, which her artist said wasn’t possible with her skin tone. I sent her to mine, and he proceeded to go off about how dark skin accepts greens, yellows, and white beautifully, and that her previous artist just lacked the skills to use those 3 colors as highlights to make other colors pop more. If you are dark skinned and your tattoo artist says you can’t have bright colors, find a new one.
Re-blogged again for that added text!!!
I’ve had several racist ass tattoo artists literally REFUSE to tattoo colour on me saying it would be “a waste” to tattoo colour on black skin…
I don't know for sure if I'd call this "Interstitial," but it still felt worth posting here.
Tbilisi
In the words of the artist MEKI GIORGADZE:
In this project are collected attractions of Tbilisi (the capital of Georgia) , the project goal are popularize tourist places in my town and show the sightseeing of Tbilisi from different view.
Images and text via
This is just to say
I have eaten
the spiders that were in my cave
and which you were probably counting for statistical purposes
Forgive me I am an outlier adn should not have been counted
“Average poem parodied three times a year” factoid is actually statistical error. Average poem is parodied 0 times a year. This is Just To Say by William Carlos Williams, which is not a metaphor for Plato’s cave and is parodied over 10,000 times each day, is an outlier and should not have been counted.
I’m not sure when this bottom bit here got added but it really is the best addition to my post I’ve ever seen.
truly
Great Art in Ugly Rooms
Paul Kremer’s ongoing series title says it all. Great Art in Ugly Rooms is a visual experiment consisting of pictures of “great art” placed in “ugly rooms.“ Started in 2013 this tumblr has been described as "the visual equivalent of a Steven Wright stand up routine" and as the "enchanting train wreck that occurs when a truly great work of art is juxtaposed with the most revolting of interiors.” [via]
Check out this tumblr!
“Ounce for ounce, bone is actually stronger than steel, and a cubic inch of it can bear four times the load than its concrete equivalent. Bone’s strength is derived from a composite of protein and insoluble salt or mineral called “hydroxyapatite,” which gives it the benefit of both stiffness and resistance. The ratio of this composite in a human femur, for example, is about 50:50, while something like an eggshell contains approximately five percent protein and 95 percent mineral content.
Using these ratios as a starting point, Oyen and her team were able to successfully produce samples of synthetic bone and eggshell by “templating” hydroxyapatite directly onto a substrate of natural collagen.
“One of the interesting things is that the minerals that make up bone deposit along the collagen, and eggshell deposits outwards from the collagen, perpendicular to it,” said Oyen. “So it might even be the case that these two composites could be combined to make a lattice-type structure, which would be even stronger—there’s some interesting science there that we’d like to look into.”
The group of engineers said their technique requires little energy and can be easily scaled, but because it currently requires the use of animal collagen as a protein source, they plan to replicate their results using more humane properties, such as synthetic polymers. It’s also unclear how much the production of artificial bone would cost compared to concrete and steel.”
Visions of huge vats of growing bone I-beams.
ART IS DOPE
*waves frantically at @interstitialarts*
Japanese Paper Embroidery Notebooks Hold Vintage Science Illustrations
Athens-based boutique Fabulous Cat Papers (previously featured here) showcases a beautiful range of hand-made embroidery notebooks composed of Japanese paper and scientific illustrations. Featuring hand-stiched floral, geometric and anatomical designs, the notebooks are a beautiful contemporary effort with a vintage touch.
Constructed from sewing threads, card stock, European paper, and waxed string, each design is meticulously illustrated by different color threads, which emulate various scientific graphs, which include the golden ratio, the anatomy of the heart, and black hole models.
The artist also pays homage to Japanese culture with the presence of stunning needlepoint compositions of its native flowers, such as bamboo and magnolias. The metaphysical and unique designs are 3D paper manifestations of nature’s obscurity and beauty. Find more of their notebooks in their Etsy shop!
View similar posts here!
normal things with creepy connotations:
stopped clocks
people accidentally speaking in unison
cold wind at night (when it’s not snowing)
seeing a light go off in a window
static in the air - everyone’s hair is standing up
slow piano music in a place that’s otherwise silent
finding something you lost a long time ago sitting in plain sight
Walking on Water
Christo’s ‘Floating Piers’ installation finally opens to the public June 18th. The highly-anticipated reveal sees 100,000 square meters of shimmering yellow fabric wrap a floating dock that connects various points on Italy’s Lake Iseo. Undulating with the movement of the waves, visitors can now experience the ‘Floating Piers’ as they walk from Sulzano to Monte Isola and to the island of San Paolo, which it completely encircles. The 3 kilometer-long walkway extends clear across the water, with surrounding mountains offering a bird’s-eye view of a golden network of passageways that lead in and around the town. The fabric continues along 1.5 kilometers of pedestrian streets in Sulzano and Peschiera Maraglio.
Images and text via + via
some very nice color schemes:
gold and blood
deep water, rusty clay cliffs
wet sand and black ink
lilac, wisteria, lavender, and bronze
honeycomb, pomegranate seeds, and raw meat
the green/silver/rotting earth tones of old growth forests
clean, milky sky blue and the bright, bruised tones of out-of-control fire
every gentle grey you can think of shot through with electric teal
overripe peach and faded off-white
This video should jump to minute 59 of the episode, leaving about another 40 minutes of content.
In the new episode of Cortex, CGP Grey and Myke Hurley talk about their experience with a prototype Occulus Rift that they describe as “lifechanging.” I think that anyone who’s interested in the future of technology, whether as SF writers or just as interested people, would get a lot from this. It’s a glimpse into a technology horizon that we are, apparently, about to cross.
So grateful to this for making it all clear! I need to have it printed up on cards, so now every time someone asks me to explain my new project (*coff coff* elderly relatives) I can just hand this to them.
Tremontaine is the collaborative, serial prequel to my novel Swordspoint. The first episode of Season 1, written by me, is free online. It’s 13 episodes, the final one also written by me.
The other writers in S1 - each worth their weight in gold! - are @malindalo, Joel Derfner, @lettersfromtitan, Patty Bryant, Paul Witcover & @alayadawnjohnson . Cover art by @tanaudel.
Wayne Thiebaud
Wayne Thiebaud (born November 15, 1920) is an American painter widely known for his colorful works depicting commonplace objects—pies, lipsticks, paint cans, ice cream cones, pastries, and hot dogs—as well as for his landscapes and figure paintings. Thiebaud is associated with the Pop art movement because of his interest in objects of mass culture, although his early works, executed during the fifties and sixties, slightly predate the works of the classic pop artists. Thiebaud uses heavy pigment and exaggerated colors to depict his subjects, and the well-defined shadows characteristic of advertisements are almost always included in his work.
Text via