10 track album
I never use Tumblr anymore, but here’s an album I made!
Hope you enjoy!
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
Show & Tell

@theartofmadeline

PR's Tumblrdome
Fai_Ryy
cherry valley forever
occasionally subtle
wallacepolsom
Xuebing Du

izzy's playlists!

Origami Around
Sade Olutola

oozey mess
No title available
official daine visual archive

⁂
Keni

Love Begins
Three Goblin Art
Today's Document

seen from Singapore
seen from Iraq

seen from Australia

seen from Peru
seen from Brazil

seen from Peru
seen from Morocco
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 United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@mahoganobunagany
10 track album
I never use Tumblr anymore, but here’s an album I made!
Hope you enjoy!
Yo! I never post anything on here anymore, but I recorded a new song! Hope ya like it.
These melt together so beautifully
Take this important VISION TEST: ARE YOU SEEING DOUBLE?
Man, I haven’t been on here in ages! Welp, here’s a new song I wrote. Hope you enjoy!!
Been a long time tumblr! I'm making a lot of new music lately, here's a song a that I started yesterday and finished a couple hours ago. Was pretty hard, but with enough coffee I finally finished it. Enjoy!
Incredible Vintage Animated Gifs
Nearly 155 years before the first animated gif appeared in 1887, Belgian physicist Joseph Plateau unveiled an invention called the phenakistoscope, a device that is largely considered to be the first mechanism for true animation. The simple gadget relied on the persistence of the vision principle to create the illusion of images in motion.
The phenakistoscope used a spinning disc attached vertically to a handle. Arrayed around the disc’s center were a series of drawings showing phases of the animation, and cut through it were a series of equally spaced radial slits. The user would spin the disc and look through the moving slits at the disc’s reflection in a mirror. The scanning of the slits across the reflected images kept them from simply blurring together, so that the user would see a rapid succession of images that appeared to be a single moving picture.
Though Plateau is credited with inventing the device, there were numerous other mathematicians and physicists who were working on similar ideas around the same time, and they too were building on the works of Greek mathematician Euclid and Sir Isaac Newton who had also identified the principles behind the phenakistoscope.
source 1, 2, 3, 4
Mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus)
Gammell illustrations from ‘Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark’.
And I’m down on my hands and knees Begging you please, baby Show me your world
Been waiting for this mixtape for a while. It's Jymmy Kafka's first and I gotta say, I am impressed as fuck!
I really dig Yoshitaka Amano's stuff.
Yoshitaka Amano
Yoshitaka Amano.