Something
and a fucking spinach.

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taylor price
DEAR READER

tannertan36

Kiana Khansmith
dirt enthusiast

pixel skylines
NASA

PR's Tumblrdome
almost home
Keni
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

Origami Around
AnasAbdin
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
wallacepolsom

Janaina Medeiros

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seen from Germany
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seen from United States
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seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Germany

seen from Switzerland

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@juliarabbid
Something
and a fucking spinach.
They're waiting for you 😘
pokemon WIND
the bronx, ny.
I love the gif because there’s an incredible number of mistakes crammed into just a couple of seconds.
1. how the hole starts in the wall but it keeps moving forward
2. then magically heals itself
3. the triceratops walks right through the wall
4. the table blinking before the dinosaurs appear
5. both tables disappear
6. so suddenly appear again as they are toppling over
7. two people clipping into running without any transition
8. the table outline hides a man’s legs but there is no table
9. the triceratops horns aren’t white in the second clip
10. tables changing both color and material in the second clip
11. a carnivorous dinosaur’s first instinct is to go and eat a whole plate with salad
I miss traditional 2D animation… 3D CGI doesn’t get you masterworks like this
as an animation professional, i can tell you the official term for this is “giving up!”
kirby discovers the wonders of a sink and proceeds to waste gallons
I return from the void for this cutie
Love all the colors! ♡
Yayy! They’re best! ☺️
In the hills of Colletto Fava, in Piedmont, Italy, once stood an enormous pink rabbit, over 60 meters tall: Hase, created in 2005 by the Austrian art collective Gelitin. Woven from waterproof fabric and stuffed with straw, it was designed to be climbed, walked on, and hugged by visitors, like a toy fallen from the sky. Its purpose was not only to entertain but also to show how art and nature intertwine: the artists planned for the rabbit to slowly decompose over the years, until it disappeared.
By 2016, the weather had already begun to erode its form, and today, only a few traces remain. Where the gigantic Hase once stood, vegetation has reclaimed its place. This artwork, more than a curious attraction, became a silent reminder that time never stops, not even for the most monumental creations.