I just found a back stitch alphabet where tiny cats in various poses make up the letters and I don’t think I’m ever going to use another font for the rest of my life.
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This is amazing.
will byers stan first human second
noise dept.
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PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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@leemeredith
I just found a back stitch alphabet where tiny cats in various poses make up the letters and I don’t think I’m ever going to use another font for the rest of my life.
Tell me more
This is amazing.
I firmly believe that not only should we raise the minimum wage, but we should also create a maximum wage. There is no reason in which an orthopedic surgeon, which is the highest paying doctor will make an average of $464,500 a year, while the top 10 CEOs earn well over $33 BILLION a year. If we even so much as cap their earning potential at $1 billion, which is more money than anyone should really need to live a happy fulfilling lifestyle, then it would force them to put that money toward the company or be punished. This means giving their employees better health insurance, giving them more vacations, better wages, paying for their college or their children’s education, creating more jobs, and improving the functionality of their companies. Perhaps even force them to invest in the communities they are serving.
For those of you who are still skeptical… let me put it this way… the highest earning CEO “earned” $156,077,912 in 2014. Let’s boil this down. There’s about 52 weeks in a year. Let’s say that he works 40 hours a week. So a total of 2,080 hours a year. That’s $75,037 an hour. The median HOUSEHOLD income in the US is $50,502 per year. He’s earning 1.5 times the amount per hour than the average household makes in a year. That disparity is absurd. To put that even further into perspective, the average NEUROLOGIST earns $219,000 a year according to a 2014 statistic. Every single one of the CEOs on the 100 highest paid CEOs earn at least 93 TIMES the amount that a NEUROLOGIST makes.
Something needs to change. People shouldn’t be starving for the sake of someone else’s greed.
Circus Tree: Six individual sycamore trees were shaped, bent, and braided to form this.
Actually pretty easy. Trees don’t reject tissue from other trees in the same family. You bend the tree to another tree when it is a sapling, scrape off the bark on both trees where they touch, add some damp sphagnum moss around them to keep everything slightly moist and bind them together. Then wait a few years- The trees will have grown together. You can use a similar technique to graft a lemon branch or a lime branch or even both- onto an orange tree and have one tree that has all three fruits. Frankentrees.
As a biologist I can clearly state that plants are fucking weird and you should probably be slightly afraid of them.
On that note! At the university (UBC) located in town, the Agriculture students were told by their teacher that a tree flipped upside down would die. So they took an excavator and flipped the tree upside down. And it’s still growing. But the branches are now the roots, and the roots are now these super gnarly looking branches. Be afraid.
But Vi, how can you mention that and NOT post a picture? D:
[source]
I am both amazed and horrified of nature as we all should be
I love how trees are like “fuck it, I’ll deal” at literally everything. Forest fire? Cool, my seeds’ll finally grow. Upside down? Branches, suck, roots, leave. What’s this new branch? Eh, welcome to the tree buddy.
I need to be more like tree
I continue to fear and respect out arboreal overlords.
what kind of professor did these students have that they needed to prove him wrong so badly that they literally dug up a tree, flipped it and put it back in the ground?
Sounds like y’all’ve never heard about the Tree of 40 Fruits. Well, it’s exactly as it sounds. Sam Van Aken, an artist based in New York, decided to try his hand at grafting (e.g. the process by which you attach the branches of a different tree to a host tree).
As artists are inclined to do he decided to push some limits and over the course of a few years he grafted over 40 different fruit onto the host “ including almond, apricot, cherry, nectarine, peach and plum varieties.”
It has a fruiting period lasting from July to October and this is what it looks like when blossoming.
Shit’s tight yo.
Also we have a group called the Guerrilla Grafters. A group who started in San Fransisco with the goal of grafting fruiting branches onto non-fruiting trees of the same type.
Most cities have fruit trees that simply don’t produce fruit because having all these would be a mess and inadvertently providing unregulated food to people comes with a lot of legal risks I suppose. These grafters seem to think otherwise and have taken it upon themselves to try and bring fruit trees back to urban areas.
HOLY SHIT
THE LAST ONE
Solarpunk as fuck!!
Reblogging for “I continue to fear and respect out arboreal overlords.”
That thing about how cats think humans are big kittens is a myth, y’know.
It’s basically born of false assumptions; folks were trying to explain how a naturally solitary animal could form such complex social bonds with humans, and the explanation they settled on is “it’s a displaced parent/child bond”.
The trouble is, cats aren’t naturally solitary. We just assumed they were based on observations of European wildcats - but housecats aren’t descended from European wildcats. They’re descended from African wildcats, which are known to hunt in bonded pairs and family groupings, and that social tendency is even stronger in their domesticated relatives. The natural social unit of the housecat is a colony: a loose affiliation of cats centred around a shared territory held by alliance of dominant females, who raise all of the colony’s kittens communally.
It’s often remarked that dogs understand that humans are different, while cats just think humans are big, clumsy cats, and that’s totally true - but they regard us as adult colonymates, not as kittens, and all of their social behaviour toward us makes a lot more sense through that lens.
The like to cuddle because communal grooming is how cats bond with colonymates - it establishes a shared scent-identity for the colony and helps clean spots that they can’t easily reach on their own.
They bring us dead animals because cats transport surplus kills back to the colony’s shared territory for consumption by pregnant, nursing, or sick colonymates who can’t easily hunt on their own. Indeed, that’s why they kill so much more than they individually need - it’s not for fun, but to generate enough surplus kills to sustain the colony’s non-hunting members.
They’re okay with us messing with their kittens because communal parenting is the norm in a colony setting, and us being colonymates in their minds automatically makes us co-parents.
It’s even why many cats are so much more tolerant toward very small children, as long as those children are related to one of their regular humans: they can tell the difference between human adults and human “kittens”, and your kittens are their kittens.
Basically, you’re going to have a much easier time getting a handle on why your cat does why your cat does if you remember that the natural mode of social organisation for cats is not as isolated solitary hunters, but as a big communal catpile - and for that purpose, you count as a cat.
This is a cool and interesting scientific post but all I really got out of it is that warrior cats is real
Cats are THE BEST. This helped me understand why three generations of litters followed me through the streets one night when I went stalking about because I couldnt sleep. It was like a cat colony, with me as the pack leader, and it was one of the best memories of my life…paws down.
I love that gif of the cat walking though the door with that big ass blanket
If you look at the ingredients list and it’s a bunch of words you don’t even know… neither does your body (x)
Just like if you break apples and grapefruit down into their chemical components, I’m willing to bet that most people wouldn’t recognize the “ingredients” either. It’s a bunch of words you don’t even know:
External image
Don’t use these scare tactics - Chemicals aren’t inherently bad. Literally everything is made up chemicals. Trust me, your body knows what niacin is. It knows how to digest fructose and calcium sulfate. Even if you only consume the most basic and “real” foods that are pulled directly off the vine, you’re still ingesting a series of chemical compounds that you probably can’t pronounce. That’s okay.
thanks to drhoz for submitting!
“If you can’t pronounce it, it’s bad for you” is literally the worst pseudo-scientific scaremongering bullshit tactic. I hate it so much.
I’m pretty sure you can pronounce “arsenic”, but that doesn’t change the fact that arsenic is highly toxic. On the other hand, you couldn’t pronounce “cycloadenosine monophosphate” or “nicotine-amide-dinucleotide-phosphate”, though both of them serve vital roles in human biochemistry and you would die if your body wouldn’t produce them.
Cyanide: Easy to pronounce, very bad for you.
Eicosapentaenoic acid: Difficult to pronounce, very good for you.
It’s more important to know what the chemicals are and why they’re in there. Anti-intellectualism helps no one.
– James Kennedy, ‘Chemophobia’ is irrational, harmful – and hard to break
I’m gonna keep reblogging this until my knuckles fall off.
This is especially hilarious because grapefruit is well known for being dangerous for some people because of how it can interact with certain medications. Do fruit loops do that?
“Poison is in everything, and no thing is without poison. The dosage makes it either a poison or a remedy.” - Paracelsus
by Kat Swenski
Making biscuits with Gordon Ramsay.
This is it. The best video on the web.
Here’s one final Color Squared video for you: the halftone dots method, for a zoomed-in newspaper photo kind of look. If you like the look but you don’t have a marker that can make different sized dots like this, or you have a hard time controlling the size (it’s tricky, takes some practice!), you can make the same look with a stamping method instead. Take 5 pencils with erasers, and carve out the erasers into 5 sizes of dots, largest to smallest. Both options are included in the book instructions.
Color Squared is out today!! Wooooo! Here’s a video of me coloring a picture with a four-color method, with Crayola markers.
A picture from Color Squared, colored using a continuous lines method. I used a LePen technical drawing pen, and Prismacolor brush tip markers for the color at the end.
The book includes tons of coloring methods, using up to six colors, or just one single color of marker or pen. Plus, you can always color the background however you want!
A picture from Color Squared, colored using the three-color layered method, with dots and circles, a method given in the book instructions.
I used Prismacolor dual tip markers, brush tip for the full color fills and fine point tip for the dots and circles.
The book includes tons of coloring methods, using up to six colors, or just one single color of marker or pen. Plus, you can color the background however you want! I haven't dealt with the background yet in the video.
(Color Squared is published by Clarkson Potter, coming out on June 27th, find info here.)
Color Squared process for one of the single-color pen methods! The book has lots of different ways you can create a picture with just one pen or marker, as well as lots of coloring methods using three, four, or six colors!
Color Squared! My first non-self-published book! It’s a twist on coloring books, part color-by-number, part puzzle, tons of coloring or drawing options! You don’t even have to use colors; there are a bunch of options that can just use a pen. Or there are six-color, four-color, and three-color options, and even options that use stamps. And then you can do whatever you want to the background, so that gives more color potential. These samples show the same image colored a bunch of different ways, plus different kinds of colored backgrounds. It’s coming out on June 27th, on Clarkson Potter!
Oh hi, Tumblr!
I’ve been away, but I’m going to peek back in here... I have a book coming out! Color Squared! And I’m in school now for graphic design, so that’s fun! I’ve updated and relaunched leemeredith.com as a home base site, where I’ll eventually have graphic design stuff. My knitting patterns still exist too! I’m just not really designing new ones these days, but I might again in the future, time will tell... And I may soon start selling some other knitting (and non-knitting) related stuff that I’ve been brainstorming about for summer projects... Anyway, just wanted to say hi before I start posting stuff again! Hi!
My Galax pattern is now available on ravelry!
If you think about it, all these thinkpieces about how Millenials are “killing” various industries reveal a pretty colossal sense of entitlement.
Under normal circumstances, if a given industry finds itself unable to sell products to a given market demographic, we’d say it’s that industry’s fault for failing to offer products that that demographic is interested in buying.
It only makes sense to blame the target demographic itself is if we’re assuming that the established industries have some intrinsic right to that demographic’s disposable income that’s being denied - which is clearly nonsense.
And I thought Millennials were supposed to be the entitled ones?
That is a fascinating point.
Since corporations became people i guess it’s possible to kill them now. I am proud to be part of it.
Seriously. It's so ridiculous. According to what I'm learning in my very basic intro to marketing class, these businesses should be looking at millennials as not being in their target market (because they aren't interested or don't have the money to pay), so it's up to the businesses to market to their actual target market, not blame the people outside of that target. And if the target has gotten too small to sustain the business, then it's up to the business to change, right? Wtf.