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beautiful

The most beautiful thing your eyes will feast on today — cheetahs sprinting in slow-mo

Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes” Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes” Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes” Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes” Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes” Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes”

Suren Manvelyan’s “Animal eyes”

See the world through the eyes of a very talented macro photographer

Die-cut business cards for Ilumini Photography by Beast Pieces

Die-cut business cards for Ilumini Photography by Beast Pieces

Breathtaking Orient.

Breathtaking Orient.

VITAMIN BOMBby Georgi Dimitrov.
Delicious.  VITAMIN BOMBby Georgi Dimitrov.
Delicious.  VITAMIN BOMBby Georgi Dimitrov.
Delicious.  VITAMIN BOMBby Georgi Dimitrov.
Delicious.  VITAMIN BOMBby Georgi Dimitrov.
Delicious. 

VITAMIN BOMB
by Georgi Dimitrov.

Delicious. 


While on the job as a high school teacher in Minnesota, artist Gregory Euclide (Hi-Fructose vol. 17) began creating ephemeral paintings on whiteboards during his 25-minute lunch periods as a way to push the boundaries of creativity in the classroom. The ongoing series of works, titled “Laid Down & Wiped Away,” features delicately rendered landscapes smudged with sweeping arcs and dotted with geometric forms.

Shows that medium and sophisticated tooling is irrelevant to those who are truly talented. 
While on the job as a high school teacher in Minnesota, artist Gregory Euclide (Hi-Fructose vol. 17) began creating ephemeral paintings on whiteboards during his 25-minute lunch periods as a way to push the boundaries of creativity in the classroom. The ongoing series of works, titled “Laid Down & Wiped Away,” features delicately rendered landscapes smudged with sweeping arcs and dotted with geometric forms.

Shows that medium and sophisticated tooling is irrelevant to those who are truly talented. 
While on the job as a high school teacher in Minnesota, artist Gregory Euclide (Hi-Fructose vol. 17) began creating ephemeral paintings on whiteboards during his 25-minute lunch periods as a way to push the boundaries of creativity in the classroom. The ongoing series of works, titled “Laid Down & Wiped Away,” features delicately rendered landscapes smudged with sweeping arcs and dotted with geometric forms.

Shows that medium and sophisticated tooling is irrelevant to those who are truly talented.

While on the job as a high school teacher in Minnesota, artist Gregory Euclide (Hi-Fructose vol. 17) began creating ephemeral paintings on whiteboards during his 25-minute lunch periods as a way to push the boundaries of creativity in the classroom. The ongoing series of works, titled “Laid Down & Wiped Away,” features delicately rendered landscapes smudged with sweeping arcs and dotted with geometric forms.

Shows that medium and sophisticated tooling is irrelevant to those who are truly talented.

Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.
Go here for more pictures and details. Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.
Go here for more pictures and details. Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.
Go here for more pictures and details. Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.
Go here for more pictures and details. Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.
Go here for more pictures and details.

Apple user Andrew Kim makes an awesome case for re-branding Microsoft in the new age.

Go here for more pictures and details.

Designer of the Bullet train also designed a sauce dispenser, a really good sauce dispenser.

Just 16 and recently released from a naval academy, Kenji Ekuan witnessed Hiroshima’s devastation from the train taking him home. “Faced with that nothingness, I felt a great nostalgia for human culture,” he recalled from the offices of G. K. Design, the firm he co-founded in Tokyo in 1952. “I needed something to touch, to look at,” he added. “Right then I decided to be a maker of things.”

One of the most enduring objects in his 60-year design career — which includes the Akita bullet train and Yamaha motorbikes — is the Kikkoman soy-sauce dispenser. Introduced in 1961, it has been in continuous production ever since. Traditional in its grace yet modern in its materials, the bottle’s design drew on Ekuan’s experiences at war’s end. 

 

Beautiful.