Eldena, 1824, Caspar David Friedrich
RMH
we're not kids anymore.
NASA
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
todays bird
Jules of Nature
Misplaced Lens Cap
Keni
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

pixel skylines
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
The Bowery Presents
wallacepolsom
official daine visual archive
almost home
Today's Document
$LAYYYTER
Game of Thrones Daily

bliss lane
untitled
seen from United States
seen from Vietnam

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

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

seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Canada
seen from Hungary

seen from Italy

seen from Mexico
@qquazar
Eldena, 1824, Caspar David Friedrich
Anna Haifisch
a rating of all the frogs in my neighbors’ frog-themed bathroom
very round and good! his face shows an emotion that i can’t quite describe. 10/10
here we have an arts and crafts frog! he has a nice figure but his lack of eyes is unsettling. 6/10
this is a truly excellent frog, he’s going places and he doesn’t care how long it takes. 12/10 for realism.
this frog looks like he’s having a cheeky little giggle at you for being in the bathroom for so long. something about him unsettles me. 2/10
this is the woodchime frog. he watches you smugly. i don’t like how he’s watching me, 5/10 because he’s kinda cute anyway
i hate it. 0/10
this fellow is perched right next to the toilet. one eye stares directly at your back, while the other looks at the wall. 6/10 good frog shape but still very unsettling
a truly excellent pair of comrades! double frog points 20/10
it’s Awful. -5/10
@frogsuggest
all are good!!! 0/10 frog were robbed!
brain junk (Jan 2019) / mixed media in sketchbook / instagram
The X-Files, the unnatural (6x19) / instagram.
Beauty Beyond Nature: Stunning Artistic Glass Paperweights by Paul J. Stankard
After battling undiagnosed dyslexia for his entire youth (at one time graduating the bottom of his class), Stankard struggled greatly to identify his life’s calling. While in college he discovered scientific glass blowing, the manual process of creating scientific instruments out of glass for use in laboratories. He was instantly hooked and for 10 years worked with industrial glass. Eventually the pressure of a growing family at home lead to an experiment with the creation of glass paperweights in his garage to supplement his income.
When Stankard suddenly directed a decade of industrial glassworking techniques into the interpretation of flowers, bees, vines, and leaves encased in glass, it wasn’t long before an art dealer discovered his work and he began to create art full-time. His pieces now appear in over 60 museums around the world including the Smithsonian, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Louvre.
You can see much more of his work on his website, at the Corning Museum of Glass, and in his book, Homage to Nature.
Txt Via Colossal
Hiroshi Nagai
From VSCO
Le Bonheur | Agnès Varda | 1965
Masochistic Instrument, 1934, Salvador Dali
Medium: oil, canvas
Kaikisen
keeley bentley
Pauline at the beach, Éric Rohmer (1983)