Why do you weep? Did you think I was immortal?
last words of Louis XIV
Misplaced Lens Cap
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
almost home
occasionally subtle
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
d e v o n

#extradirty

PR's Tumblrdome
we're not kids anymore.
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
DEAR READER
dirt enthusiast

Love Begins

roma★
Peter Solarz
Acquired Stardust

oozey mess
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Claire Keane
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Italy
seen from Malaysia

seen from Iraq
seen from Poland

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Czechia
seen from United States

seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Singapore
seen from United Kingdom
@thatindokid
Why do you weep? Did you think I was immortal?
last words of Louis XIV
The Wait, Atelier Aveus
Kent Rogowski: Love = Love, 2006-2008
Love=Love is a series of collages that were created using pieces of over 60 store bought puzzles. Although puzzle pieces are unique, and can only fit into one place within a puzzle, they are sometimes interchangeable within a brand. These puzzles were cut using the same die, but depict unrelated images. Using only the flowers and skies from each of the puzzles, I created a series of entirely new compositions by recombining the puzzle pieces. These spectacular, fantastical and surreal landscapes sit in direct contrast to the banal and bucolic images of the original puzzles. (artist statement)
Finishing the final season of a TV show you love is sad because its like losing many friends all at once. You’ve spent month/years watching them grow and develop but you will never see or hear new things from the characters ever again. They are effectively dead..
On the 17th of October 2018, NASA posted a photograph of a tabular iceberg on Twitter: its shape made it a strange image of order in a world where climate change and rising waters are associated solely with visions of chaos.
French visual artist Hugo Livet saw this image, and like many others questioned who had created it: Surely it could not be a product of nature? Inspired by this strange sheet of ice found floating near the east coast of the Antarctic Peninsula, Livet decided to create his own angular icebergs in a series titled ‘Derivé’. “The first thing that came to my mind while looking at the picture was ‘who did that?’”, Livet explains. “I then realized that it was the work of nature—but was it really?” Using photographs of bodies of ice that he found available royalty-free on the internet, Livet reconfigured their content to create his series of angular icebergs.
(via ignant)
Mickey Mouse gas mask for children WWII.
iris van herpen ss19
- lemony snicket, penultimate peril: part two