Street Style: Breaking Up Neutrals With Turquoise Pants
Posted 1 week ago
via details
94 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via erinbowman
253697 Notes
Know were you stand: Modern Day Locations blended with Major Historical Events by Seth Taras
1. The Hindenberg Disaster of May 6, 1937
2. Allied soldiers rushing the beach at Normandy in June 1944
3. The Fall of the Berlin wall in 1989
4. Adolf Hitler touring Paris and standing in front of the Eiffel Tower in 1940
What an amazing photo project
Source: fer1972
Posted 1 month ago
via npr
33742 Notes
Long Term Exposure of Mating Gold Fireflies
Japanese photographer Yuki Karo goes to various places around Maniwa and Okayama Prefectures in Japan and uses long exposure to capture some stunning shots of mating gold fireflies.
Source: boredpanda.com
Posted 1 month ago
via erinbowman
44844 Notes
ubeki-beki-beki-beki-stan-stan:
Sculptures made with Keys by Moerkey
I want these.
Let me just scroll up and stare some more…
Source: fer1972
Posted 2 months ago
via yummyinmytumbly
117 Notes
Posted 3 months ago
via staceythinx
2650 Notes
Landscapes from Saint Rémy (1889)
As a Dutch post-Impressionist painter, Vincent Van Gogh influenced the 20th century art with his landscape paintings where he used vivid colors that made an emotional impact. The early works of Van Gogh were painted with a palette of somber earth tones and no signs of the vivid coloration that distinguished his later works. When he moved to Paris in 1886, he was inspired by the French Impressionists and was fascinated by the strong sunlight on the south of France. Since then, he used brighter colors in his paintings that helped him develop a unique style of his own which became known considerably in the later years of his life while staying in Arles in 1888. Van Gogh’s incredible Sunflowers series of still life paintings were loved by him and he felt that there could not be anything better to convey a sense of welcome, belongingness and happiness.
On 8 May 1889, accompanied by his carer, van Gogh committed himself to the hospital at Saint Rémy.
During his stay in Saint-Rémy, Van Gogh produced 150 paintings after he converted an adjacent cell into a studio. While he was confined to the direct asylum grounds, he painted the world he could see from his room, and ignored the bars that obscured his view. His paintings in the garden of the asylum included irises, lilacs, and ivy-covered trees. His paintings further ventured into the fields, of which he painted the wheatfields, olive groves, and cypress trees from the surrounding countryside view. This imposed regimen of his asylum life gave him contentment and helped him to think positively about his life and future.
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Source: razorshapes
Posted 3 months ago
via lensblr-network
1015 Notes
Sea fog in the coastal forest lent a mysterious air to our hike. Near Third Beach, Olympic National Park. January 2013. © Eric Mickelson.
Source: ericmickelson
