todays bird
Keni

izzy's playlists!

roma★

Andulka
Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
Stranger Things

shark vs the universe
dirt enthusiast
styofa doing anything

★
DEAR READER
No title available
will byers stan first human second
AnasAbdin
Three Goblin Art

Janaina Medeiros
NASA

JVL
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Argentina

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Italy

seen from Singapore

seen from Mexico
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Netherlands
@joshuawitten
Roger Parry - Etude pour la couverture de Les Trois jeunes filles de Vienne (fumeuse d'opium) 1934
Pedro Rodriguez 1968
a something of a somebody
evidently once a Something of a Somebody, very calmly Too much all-aloney on the prairie — mad. In some ways the prairie was a Sargasso Sea, where wrecks lay drowned forever. The theory of relativity reaches far — water can become a passion.
ex “Bad Lands” — “The Story of a Brush with Death” (on first page), and/but “A story of love in the desert” (at ToC) — by Henry Wallace Phillips, pictures by Frank Hoffman, in Liberty 6:2 (January 19, 1929) : 66-68, 71-74 more : link
all a something of’s
The 7 Deadly Sins, France, 1950 by René Maltête
Bob Marley, by Ian Dickson
“Shape of Things to Come”
Jules Oldroyd, United Kingdom
The Monochrome Photography Awards
Today's Exhibit of the Day is a blast from the past! This archival image, snapped in 1938, depicts Museum preparators sculpting a model Triceratops. This large herbivore could reach lengths of 28 ft (8.5 m). The model pictured here isn't on display today, but Triceratops fans can spot a fossil skeleton in the Hall of Ornithischian Dinosaurs.
Photo: AMNH Library / Image no. 315711
X Ray Spex with Lora Logic on tour, 1977. Photos by & © Ian Dickson.
The parts of a tree. A Book of General Science. 1931.
Internet Archive
blues dance (Richard Saunders 1983)
Ikko Narahara
Masahiko Kuroki
Luscious Jackson