Wednesday, December 2, 2009
thesearemyfavoritethings:

justbesplendid:

m-altruism:

Men and Women


HAHAHAHA! poor guy!

awesome.  id’ want the equivalent for women’s stalls.

thesearemyfavoritethings:

justbesplendid:

m-altruism:

Men and Women

HAHAHAHA! poor guy!

awesome.  id’ want the equivalent for women’s stalls.

Jetsons-like video made by Disneyland in the 1950’s … love the graphics and ideas they had are fun to watch…

as each idea emerged i started to notice how everyone was transported…no one was walking…so i began to wonder where the obese people were…

also where they were planning on getting all that energy … and where they planned on dumping it…

i get it…the idea was to make things easier… now we’re finding it’s harder to clean up

Sunday, November 29, 2009
Post-Apocalypse New York
not bad…check out the gallery/series from Gizmodo here

Post-Apocalypse New York


not bad…check out the gallery/series from Gizmodo here

waw.  must. live. there.La casa se llama, Universe, esta en Roca Blanca, Mexico. (1/3)

waw.  must. live. there.
La casa se llama, Universe, esta en Roca Blanca, Mexico. (1/3)

Friday, November 27, 2009 Wednesday, November 25, 2009
“The Steerage” by Alfred Stieglitz.  Without looking this up, I remember that there were many triangular points of reference.  The white hat, the Y pole, and the mother’s white scarf, for instance.  The heads of the mother and her 2 children is another.  The plank’s start and end points are 2 corners of a triangular shape with the top left and bottom right corners of the frame being the third.  I think this was also not a set-up frame.  It was on a ship going to Ellis Island, or arrival at Ellis Island.  For a random snap shot…what a fantastic frame.  (I was right.  Per wiki:
While on his way to Europe Stieglitz took what is recognized not only as his signature image but also as one of the most important photographs of the 20th century. Aiming his camera at the lower class passengers in the bow of the ship, he captured a scene he titled The Steerage.

“The Steerage” by Alfred Stieglitz.  Without looking this up, I remember that there were many triangular points of reference.  The white hat, the Y pole, and the mother’s white scarf, for instance.  The heads of the mother and her 2 children is another.  The plank’s start and end points are 2 corners of a triangular shape with the top left and bottom right corners of the frame being the third. 

I think this was also not a set-up frame.  It was on a ship going to Ellis Island, or arrival at Ellis Island.  For a random snap shot…what a fantastic frame.  (I was right.  Per wiki:

While on his way to Europe Stieglitz took what is recognized not only as his signature image but also as one of the most important photographs of the 20th century. Aiming his camera at the lower class passengers in the bow of the ship, he captured a scene he titled The Steerage.
Thursday, October 15, 2009