Having a 40% sale on all my listings on my shop!
Show & Tell
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

blake kathryn

ellievsbear

@theartofmadeline
sheepfilms
todays bird
Sweet Seals For You, Always

#extradirty

if i look back, i am lost
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Today's Document
Noah Kahan
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Andulka

No title available
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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will byers stan first human second
seen from Spain

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Australia

seen from Türkiye

seen from Singapore
seen from Bangladesh

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Malaysia

seen from Ukraine

seen from Norway
seen from Japan
seen from United States

seen from Israel
@iquotetheravennevermore
Having a 40% sale on all my listings on my shop!
"At least we're getting richer"
Anti-Shell subvertising in the London Tube
Breakfast Table - Cansu Rossi
Turkish , b. 1980s
Acrylic on canvas board , 60 x 60 cm. 24 x 24 in.
'Under Monet's Pond' by Eiko Jones
the idea that every summer will be as hot if not hotter than this for the rest of my life is unbearable i need to (remembers suicide jokes are bad for my mental health) murder an oil executive
The anime is wonderful.. I am so inspired! i needed to finish this right away!!
Along the Same Path
Twitter | Tiktok | VGen | Prints available!
🟨 Quadratisch. Praktisch. Gut! 🟨
I really love square compositions!
chivalry’s shadow.
‘Hands weaving magnetic-core memory, IBM, Poughkeepsie, New York,’ 1956. Photograph by Ansel Adams.
My mother used to make computer cores as a "work from home" side business. As a child I got spending money via un-winding the ones that failed testing so that the magnetic center could be re-used. I got between $0.05 and $0.25 per core depending. Mom got more for the finished ones, of course, though I don't know how much. Her sister was an expert, and did the more complicated kind, some of which ended up in satellites and/or were used by NASA!
They were all done by hand using a kind of treadle-operated frame with a little (crochet!) hook to pull the wires around the cores. The people making them were mostly housewives who did this as a side-job in the 80s and 90s. I don't know if it's still done that way anywhere in the USA today, but the history of computing and space exploration is littered with "women's work" like this.
Bokeh study
Your Light Called Me by Andrey Kulikov
Hedy Yang, On the Horizon
blood in resin
Rick Hobson
"Sea Matryoshka (A whale eats a seal that eats a penguin that eats a fish that eats a calamari that eats a sea cucumber, and finally, there's aplankton)" Nesting dolls created in Semenov, Russia for the Helsinki-based studio COMPANY.
Eco friendly swamp houses. This has probably been my most implausible structure so far. I imagine that these houses have a wooden base with fungi grown around it. I recently discovered that fungus has been utilized to create usable energy. I found that so amazing I just had to roll with the idea.
Piece by Piece ....
[commissions]