Outkast For Vibe Magazine (2006)
taylor price
Not today Justin
will byers stan first human second
tumblr dot com
One Nice Bug Per Day

pixel skylines

bliss lane
wallacepolsom
Keni
Misplaced Lens Cap
cherry valley forever
The Bowery Presents
$LAYYYTER

JVL
Jules of Nature
noise dept.
KIROKAZE
occasionally subtle
Cosimo Galluzzi

Origami Around
seen from Slovenia

seen from United States
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
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seen from Japan

seen from Hungary

seen from Türkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Ecuador
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seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Australia
@oiramharem
Outkast For Vibe Magazine (2006)
BLOOD MOON
hellraiser shit
The House of the Future. Motorola advertisements from the early 1960s, illustrated by Charles Schridde.
MAD
You know that sort of technological/sci-fi aesthetic that was most prevalent in the late ‘80s to the mid-’90s that used a lot of grey to beige colors and angular shapes with heavily rounded edges and corners?
Syd Mead was certainly a big influence, though a bit sleeker than most examples:
One of the greatest exemplars of the aesthetic is the interior of the Enterprise-D on Star Trek: The Next Generation:
It seems to be designed to appear both futuristic and welcoming. The plastic usually has a grainy texture so it doesn’t look so shiny and cold. Light sources are soft, with the lightbulbs concealed behind corners or plastic coverings that diffuse the light; it was also usually a bit dimmer to feel more indoorsy and cosy. Pure whites are shunned. Chairs and couches are made to appear comfortable at first glance (even if weird angles and slopes would compromise comfort in practice). Ceilings and walls slope inwards, accentuating the low, cosy feeling. It makes me think of being in an airliner, since airliner interiors have a similar aesthetic (that worked to ST:TNG’s advantage; since the interiors reminded me of an airplane, it felt like they really were in a spaceship).
In some ways it seems to be a softer, cosier update of the ‘60s space age aesthetic, and there’s a smooth transition to the colder, shinier Y2K aesthetic.
BLADE RUNNER Concept Art by Syd Mead
MATERIAL!
Selections from the International Design Yearbook 15 (2000)
Y2K points to anyone who remembers the music video that last chair is featured in!
MATERIAL!
Venus de milo crying in codeine
Kacper Abolik
2016
acrylic and oil on canvas
80 x 80 cm.
mood
Concept art for the 1990 film, Total Recall (when David Cronenberg was still attached to direct).