Tuesday, May 22, 2012
homelessimpson:

oracularfires:

the 100000000th time I’ve reblogged this

ok it only has 900 something notes tho

homelessimpson:

oracularfires:

the 100000000th time I’ve reblogged this

ok it only has 900 something notes tho

(Source: moonplant)

Saturday, May 19, 2012
fuckyeahmovieclub:

The next movie is…
(I know a lot of people didn’t watch it, so now it’s your opportunity)

fuckyeahmovieclub:

The next movie is…

(I know a lot of people didn’t watch it, so now it’s your opportunity)

Thursday, May 17, 2012

loeildelindinha:

Cara’s Books

“For almost six years, photographer and artist Cara Berer has been taking a very unique approach to book art. She thoughtfully bends, folds and occasionally soaks old pages of discarded catalogues, outdated dictionaries, dated instruction manuals and rejected telephone books, transforming them into marvelous works of art. And don’t worry, bookworms – Cara has assured us that no important books have been injured during the making of any of her photographs.”

(Source: heliox)

jocelynbernard:

Kaleidoscopes. Not only a brilliant word, but also some of the best fun in a tube you can have, apart from eating Pringles of course. As a child I’d spend ages looking into them sometimes even two at a time, which is probably why my eyesight is so bad. As a result, I have been unashamedly drawn to Andy Gilmore’s geometric grids of wonderment.
There’s something so colourful and mathematically perfect about these works that it makes me crave for symmetry in every aspect of my life. Created simply with Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop, Andy says he uses “just the basic tools and a lot of time”, highlighting the painstaking effort that’s gone into them. Though aesthetically pleasing, these hypnotic arrangements often reference scales and melodies in music, adding another dimension to them all.
(via 11-16-2011 - andy gilmore)

jocelynbernard:

Kaleidoscopes. Not only a brilliant word, but also some of the best fun in a tube you can have, apart from eating Pringles of course. As a child I’d spend ages looking into them sometimes even two at a time, which is probably why my eyesight is so bad. As a result, I have been unashamedly drawn to Andy Gilmore’s geometric grids of wonderment.

There’s something so colourful and mathematically perfect about these works that it makes me crave for symmetry in every aspect of my life. Created simply with Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop, Andy says he uses “just the basic tools and a lot of time”, highlighting the painstaking effort that’s gone into them. Though aesthetically pleasing, these hypnotic arrangements often reference scales and melodies in music, adding another dimension to them all.

(via 11-16-2011 - andy gilmore)

Saturday, May 12, 2012

(Source: thesydni)

Saturday, February 11, 2012
forever-countryy:

WANT THIS?
follow me, http://forevercountryy.tumblr.com/
ONLY reblog this, no likes.
i will promo 1 out of every 5.

forever-countryy:

WANT THIS?

follow me, http://forevercountryy.tumblr.com/

ONLY reblog this, no likes.

i will promo 1 out of every 5.

(Source: leave-me-bee)