The Last Cosmology, Kikuji Kawada
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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JBB: An Artblog!
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@theartofmadeline
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Mike Driver
taylor price
Cosmic Funnies

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祝日 / Permanent Vacation
noise dept.
hello vonnie

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Sade Olutola

Kiana Khansmith
Not today Justin

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d e v o n
todays bird

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@rvnsncktty
The Last Cosmology, Kikuji Kawada
Our anxiety does not come from thinking about the future, but from wanting to control it.
Khalil Gibran (via philosophyquotes)
Graphic Design Pun Cards by Sara Heffernen
Moments of Isolation UK-based photographer May Parlar work reflects on themes of belonging and alienation. To build her fanciful scenes, Parlar explains that she layers frames to build composite images rather than manipulating the content itself. “I work across different mediums such as photography, film, performance art, sculpture, installation, and landscape art; and all of which gets merged in the end and put together with a glue that for me is the camera”.
Secret World of Stuff
LA-based illustrator Sean Charmatz anthropomorphizes everyday objects with universal emotions of surprise, frustration, and togetherness. By adding simple black lines to fruits, plants, and office supplies, Charmatz turns these otherwise unremarkable items into relatable characters.
It's OVER!
Aziraphale: We’re not friends. I don’t even like you. It’s over.
Crowley: Fine. I’m leaving. Goodbye forever!
(literally the next day)
Crowley: I’m sorry! I didn’t mean it! I miss you so much! Come with me, let’s run away together!
Aziraphale: I forgive you! But I can’t come with you.
Crowley: Fine, I’m leaving and I’m never even going to THINK about you again!
(literally that same afternoon)
Crowley: He’s not answering his phone. He needs me! Wait - fire - he’s dead! I can’t smell him! Dead forever and ever! There’s no point in going on. I’m going to drink whiskey until the world ends and I DIE.
Aziraphale: You alright there mate?
Crowley: ;_; m y l o v e ;_; where are you i will come to you no matter where you are i would destroy galaxies to protect you
Aziraphale: I need a body. Too bad I can’t use yours.
Crowley: NGK
Aziraphale: Just get to Tadfield air base.
Crowley: I would and will drive through a literal wall of fire to be with you. Anything is possible when we’re together.
(literally like an hour later)
Crowley: That’s it, it’s over, end of the world, we’re all going to die, goodbye reality, goodbye everything, this is the END of ALL THINGS it is LITERALLY SATAN here to kill us
Aziraphale: Fix it or I’ll never talk to you again.
Crowley: * M * I * R * A * C * L * E *
this is a transcript of the show.
No one brings the enemies-to-lovers-fic-drama like God Herself.
Obvious Plant
Artist Jeff Wysaski, the man behind the meme, has been creating and depositing strange flyers, placards, and packaged products in conventional retail outlets for several years. His creations are often a send-up of a popular pop culture phenomenon like Sesame Street or The Avengers, and feature chuckle-inducing copy, alternately quippy and filled with intentional typos.
Obvious Plant
Artist Jeff Wysaski, the man behind the meme, has been creating and depositing strange flyers, placards, and packaged products in conventional retail outlets for several years. His creations are often a send-up of a popular pop culture phenomenon like Sesame Street or The Avengers, and feature chuckle-inducing copy, alternately quippy and filled with intentional typos.
10 Captivating Short Stories Everyone Should Read
1. The Most Dangerous Game by Richard Connell – The story of a big game hunter finding himself stranded on an island and becoming the hunted.
2. The Last Question by Isaac Asimov – A question is posed to a supercomputer that does not get answered until the end days of man.
3. The Last Answer by Isaac Asimov – A man passes away and has a conversation with the Voice in the afterlife.
4. The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman – A collection of journal entries written by a woman whose physician husband has confined her to the upstairs bedroom of the house.
5. The Lottery by Shirley Jackson – The story of one small town’s ritual know only as “the lottery.”
6. Hills Like White Elephants by Ernest Hemingway – A couple has a tension-filled conversation at a train station in Spain.
7. All Summer in a Day by Ray Bradbury – A group of schoolchildren live on Venus where the Sun is visible for only two hours every seven years.
8. Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut – It is the year 2081, and all Americans are equal in every possible way.
9. The Monkey by Stephen King – The story of a cymbal-banging monkey toy that controls the lives around it.
10. We Can Get Them For You Wholesale by Neil Gaiman – A man named Peter searches the phone book for an assassin to kill his unfaithful fiancée.
Norwegian bank held a kids design competition for the country’s future currency -
To celebrate the popularity of this post, as well as hitting 4000 followers (!!!), here are some of the fightin’ ladies of the 1890s in action.
Continued thanks to @yesterdaysprint, as well as the thirsty Victorian gentlemen at Illustrated Police News.
Best. Animation. Ever. 😂💕
Very good use of Illustrated Police News!
Panoramic Churches
London-based photographer Peter Li uses panoramic photography to capture the entirety of the ceiling and supporting columns, of churches around the world. Li allows the viewer to get the chance to feel what it is like to stand at the center of these grand buildings.
“On Sundays Kafka goes for walks by himself, without any objective, without thinking. He says, ‘Every day I wish myself off the earth. There is nothing wrong with me except myself.’”
— from a note by Max Brod, early 1911
THROW OFF THE JANGLY YOKE OF OPPRESSION
“WE ARE THE FUTURE RUDOLPH, NOT THEM”
M: “What’s your name?”
R: “Rudolph.”
M: “What’s your real name, Rudolph?”
R: “… Red-Nose.”
M: “Quite a talent you have there, Red-Nose.”
The only holiday post worth the season
It’s that time of year again
★ T E A M C O C K R O A C H ★