i don't do bad sauce passes
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Misplaced Lens Cap
occasionally subtle
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
One Nice Bug Per Day
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

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YOU ARE THE REASON
Jules of Nature
Peter Solarz

ellievsbear
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DEAR READER
trying on a metaphor
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

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@wowzerstrousers
Exploded Flowers by Singapore-based photographer Fong Qi Wei is the most breathtaking floral art since Andrew Zuckerman’s Flower.
http://www.beastpieces.com/
Fantastic! A font made of “1000 eggs, 10 pans, 5 burned fingers, 3 hours, 1 bottle of oil and a half of flat smelling like perfect and brand new Eggs font.”
Best thing since Kevin van Aelst’s egg Cantor set.
(↬ swiss miss)
You Need To Hear This - Philips
I nominate J. D. Salinger as the least likely tweeter in literary history. A tweet is, by definition, a violation of one’s privacy—in the sense of making public thoughts that would otherwise be private—and Salinger was, for much of his life, fiercely private and seemed to want only the kind of applause that is made by one hand clapping. This wasn’t due to bashfulness—when he was young he went out to parties and to the dance clubs of his day. But for him the creative act of writing was deeply entwined with the nourishing condition of privacy, even secrecy. This privacy, in turn, not only surrounded his work but was embedded in it. His writing seems to be to be spoken in confidence directly to the reader, singular. That is why so many Salinger fans feel that their relationship with his books, especially to “Catcher in the Rye,” is like an intimacy shared.
On Twitter and writing.
Susan Sontag would’ve been in Salinger’s camp, as she famously loathed aphorisms and proclaimed that "one can never be alone enough to write."
(via explore-blog)
Homer eats doughnuts on escalator
Guitar, illustration, graphic design
Jose Guizar, Screen Print