Over the Garden Wall season
$LAYYYTER
Three Goblin Art
todays bird
almost home
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titsay

izzy's playlists!
Mike Driver

Andulka

tannertan36
Sade Olutola

Product Placement

Kiana Khansmith

Kaledo Art
Claire Keane

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
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DEAR READER
Cosimo Galluzzi

Discoholic 🪩
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@isolatedphenomenon
Over the Garden Wall season
you guys Need to start seeing bugs as animals im not even joking anymore. the second u start seeing them as tiny animals the more your world opens up and the more you accept different types of life Into that world. youll begin accepting that even life you cant understand is still worth living. and itll legitimately make you a better person. fuck
how close to an Olympian are you?
i am an Olympic athlete
my friend or family member is an Olympic athlete
someone I played Sports with or against once is an Olympic athlete
someone from my hometown is an Olympic athlete
i'm not an Olympic athlete but I've competed in the Olympic trials for my sport
i am 2-4 degrees of separation from an Olympic athlete
i randomly met an Olympic athlete once out in public
i have no connection to any Olympic athletes
i've been to the Olympics in person and seen lots of athletes that way
nuance/i'm bald/etc
inspired by this post fyi it’s just tumblr wouldnt let me reblog it with a poll >:(
proper amount of chuggas before a choo choo?
one
two
three
four
six
eight
twelve
odd number other than one or three
more than twelve
I was never taught chugga to choo choo number etiquette
A Fair Return
A comic I made for the ShortBox Patreon in 2021! So so proud of this one. You can see my other work HERE
@rabbit-factory getting more data because it really is an amazing question to ask
This conversation happened at 6am btw
Answer in the tags ↓
New England Treasure - Jeremy Miranda , 2015.
American , b. 1980 -
Acrylic on panel, 16 x 14 in
[ID: painting of a corner of gallery wall with many framed artworks of the sea on it. At the bottom is a bench made of a plank on top of cinder blocks. End ID]
I really like what this physicist, Lamar Glover, has to say in Behind the Curve.
+ this part from Spiros Michalakis:
Incredibly good take which is really rare for these topics
Evidence shows that shoving data in peoples’ faces doesn’t work to change minds.
Transcribed text:
Quote by physicist LAMAR GROVER:
“Truthers, flat-earthers, anti-vaxxers… when we leave people behind, we leave bright minds to mutate and stagnate. These folks are potential scientists gone completely wrong. Their natural inquisitiveness and rejection of norms could be beneficial to science if they were more scientifically-literate.”
Quote by Dr SPIROS MICHALAKIS:
“The problem I see is actually not from the side of the conspiracy theorists. It is actually from our side, from the side of science. Very often it is difficult not to look down. My friend said: “Sometimes, the way to change someone’s mind is to shame them”. And I say, I don’t think that’s the last resort, ever. This is the same as saying that, if a kid doesn’t get a particular subject, it’s not your fault as the teacher, it is their own fault. I do not believe that. It is you haven’t developed your empathy to see from their point of view where they’re getting stuck. The worst case scenario is you just completely push these individuals at the fringe of society, and then society just lost them.“
how are you checking if the oil is hot enough to fry things?
chopstick
water flick
touching it
hand hover over it
just vibes i dont check if my food gets soggy it gets soggy
im bald / i dont cook
I think one big reason why we don't consider the stars as important as before (not even pop-astrology anymore cares about the stars or the sky on itself, just the signs deprived of context) is because of light pollution.
For most of human history the sky looked between 1-3, 4 at most. And then all of a sudden with electrification it was gone (I'm lucky if I get 6 in my small city). The first time I saw the Milky Way fully as a kid was a spiritual experience, I was almost scared on how BRIGHT it was, it felt like someone was looking back at me. You don't get that at all with modern light pollution.
When most people talk about stargazing nowadays they think about watching about a couple of bright dots. The stars are really, really not like that. The unpolluted night sky is a festival of fireworks. There is nothing like it.
I always forget that gas giants are, you know, made of gas, and not just smooth plastic color. The atmosphere is full of clouds, and the entire planet is atmosphere!
OP is not actually Cassini's last picture. That is artwork that NASA put out years before Cassini's Grand Finale. It's gorgeous and likely a fairly accurate depiction of what Saturn looks like up close. But it is not Cassini's last image.
This is actually Cassini's final image, taken one day before it burned up in Saturn's atmosphere.
This is looking down at Saturn, and it's being illuminated by Saturn's rings which reflect sunlight down onto the "surface" of Saturn.
Here is the "natural colour" edit of this image (based on how we've observed Saturn to look from Earth)
This was taken during Cassini's descent, and is looking at the spot where Cassini would soon enter the atmosphere and burn up. Saturn has a layer of haze that obscures much of the storms and cloud activity from view in visible light (Jupiter doesn't have that haze so that's why we can see the storms), but at the same time Cassini took an image in the infrared spectrum as it descended:
So this is part of the same image, but in infrared so you can see the storms. The oval on this image marks where Cassini later entered Saturn's atmosphere and completed its 13-year mission.
So while the art in OP is of Saturn and Cassini, and possibly is a realistic rendition of Cassini's final views, that is not the view that Cassini sent back to us.
Now, here is Cassini's final full mosaic of Saturn, titled A Farewell to Saturn
I like to view this image as Cassini's true last image, the last image that was taken not as part of its end, but as an end to its long mission.
Anyway, Cassini and its Grand Finale has a lot of personal importance to me, so here are some of my favourite images taken by Cassini
"The Day the Earth Smiled"
"With the sun's powerful and potentially damaging rays eclipsed by Saturn itself, Cassini's onboard cameras were able to take advantage of this unique viewing geometry."
"Translucent Arcs"
"A Song of Ice and Light"
"Saturn’s moon Enceladus drifts before the rings and the tiny moon Pandora in this view that NASA’s Cassini spacecraft captured on Nov. 1, 2009. The entire scene is backlit by the Sun, providing striking illumination for the icy particles that make up both the rings and the jets emanating from the south pole of Enceladus, which is about 314 miles (505 km) across."
"Reflection of Sunlight off Titan Lake"
"This image shows the first flash of sunlight reflected off a hydrocarbon lake on Saturn's moon Titan. The glint off a mirror-like surface is known as a specular reflection. This kind of glint was detected by the visual and infrared mapping spectrometer (VIMS) on NASA's Cassini spacecraft on July 8, 2009. It confirmed the presence of liquid in the moon's northern hemisphere, where lakes are more numerous and larger than those in the southern hemisphere."
"Spotting Saturn's Northern Storm"
"NASA's Cassini spacecraft captures a composite near-true-color view of the huge storm churning through the atmosphere in Saturn's northern hemisphere.
This storm is the largest and most intense observed on Saturn by NASA's Voyager or Cassini spacecraft. The storm is still active. As scientists have tracked this storm over several months, they have found it covers 500 times the area of the biggest of the southern hemisphere storms observed earlier in the Cassini mission (see PIA06197 and PIA12576). The shadow cast by Saturn's rings has a strong seasonal effect, and it is possible that the switch to powerful storms now being located in the northern hemisphere is related to the change of seasons after the planet's August 2009 equinox."
Anyway, there are so many beautiful images, I definitely recommend people go check them out.
Because folks liked my latest pigeon comic so much, here's another pigeon piece!
I made this a couple years ago for a sadly now defunct publication called Pipe Wrench. I hope this piece helps spread more pigeon love.
Which one?
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Poster art by Gareth Williams for Star Trek IV The Voyage Home 1986
Gallos con tenis 🐓👟
[Image ID: Three ceramic scuptures of chickens wearing tennis shoes. End ID]
fuck it... bird sneaks
Jan De Vliegher (Belgian, b. 1964), Pigeons 2, 2010. Oil on canvas, 60 x 90 cm.