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30 Apr 07:17

Vertical Horizon Photo Project

by paul0v2
Vertical Horizon Photo Project

Vertical Horizon is a photographic journey between the buildings of a relentlessly growing city. It is a deep immersion into the city's thick atmospheres and a visual record of its wildly diverse built environment. This book is like a contemplative dive into the raw nature of Hong Kong and an expression of its vertical elan.

This project was created by the the French graphic artist Romain Jacquet-Lagreze. His interest in photography began during his period of working in Los Angeles and Tokyo, and subsequently blossomed into a passion after his arrival in Hong Kong.

Stunned by its architectural "race to the sky", he felt the need to use his camera to share his feelings about the city. The geometry of the urban environment and the vivid lives it shelters are the aspects of Hong Kong that inspire him most.

For more from Romain Jacquet-Lagreze visit his website rjl-art.com.

For more from Romain Jacquet-Lagreze visit his website rjl-art.com.

Tags:  photo photography inspiration vertical horizon
29 Apr 10:56

Psychiatry needs its Higgs boson moment

Fighting the scourge of mental illness means giving psychiatry the kind of boost that physics got from the Higgs hunt, says Nick Craddock
    


28 Apr 10:53

Physicists believe it's possible to build a perpetual motion machine

by Annalee Newitz

All bets are off. A prominent physicist has just announced that he's developed a proof for "time crystals" that can move thanks to a break in the symmetry of time. And now he's about to test his proof in the real world.

Read more...

    


28 Apr 09:38

Stress has unexpected health benefits - sometimes

Chronic stress can increase our risk of age-related diseases, but in the right conditions a little stress can protect against the effects of ageing
    


28 Apr 08:01

ibis Sleep Art App Creates Art Out of Your Nighttime Tossing & Turning

by EDW Lynch

The ibis Sleep Art app tracks your movements during sleep and turns the data into beautiful visualizations. The iPhone app was created by the ibis hotel chain. It’s available to download at the iTunes store.

ibis Sleep Art app

via Netted

28 Apr 07:34

304 Dead in Building Collapse, Bangladesh

The search for survivors continues in one of the worst manufacturing disasters in history. Fifty survivors were found today; the death toll stands at 304. Terrified workers notified the police, government officials and a powerful garment industry group about cracks in the walls, discovered just days before the collapse. The owner of the eight-story Rana Plaza assured 3,000 workers that the structure was safe and they returned to their jobs. The death toll nears 300 with more workers trapped under the massive concrete and wire. A small collection of the hundreds of images made over the last three days, follows. -- Paula Nelson ( 30 photos total)

A Bangladeshi woman weeps holding a picture of her missing husband as she waits at the site of a building that collapsed April 24, in Savar, near Dhaka, Bangladesh, April 26, 2013. (Kevin Frayer/Associated Press)
    


28 Apr 05:10

The Book of Secrets: Woodcuts Displaying Symbols and...









The Book of Secrets: Woodcuts Displaying Symbols and Illustrations of Alchemical Processes, France c. 1656 via The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

27 Apr 09:15

Triangle Tree’s Edible Spoons Are a Tasty Alternative to Plastic Utensils

by Morgana Matus

edible spoon, triangle tree, corn, biodegradable, plastic alternative

In an effort to create an alternative to disposable plastic silverware, Triangle Tree has produced Edible Spoons, a spoon that you can eat after finishing your meal. Made of corn, the spoons are biodegradable and can either be composted or consumed. The Edible Spoon is also designed to break apart after use to make snacking easier. Created with all organic ingredients, the spoon comes in three flavors (plain, spicy, or sweet), and can act as a novel snack or an eco-friendly alternative to petroleum products.

+ Triangle Tree

Via Geekologie

edible spoon, triangle tree, corn, biodegradable, plastic alternative edible spoon, triangle tree, corn, biodegradable, plastic alternative edible spoon, triangle tree, corn, biodegradable, plastic alternative edible spoon, triangle tree, corn, biodegradable, plastic alternative

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Post tags: Biodegradable, corn, edible spoon, food, Organic, petroleum, plastic, triangle tree








27 Apr 04:53

Anywhere but Here: Kowloon “Anarchy” City

by MessyNessy

It was the most densely populated place on Earth for most of the 20th century, where a room cost the equivalent of US$6 per month in high rise buildings that belonged to no country. In this urban enclave, “a historical accident”, law had no place. Drug dealers, pimps and prostitutes lived and worked alongside kindergartens, and residents walked the narrow alleys with umbrellas to shield themselves from the endless, constant dripping of makeshift water pipes above.

(c) Greg Girard

Ungoverned and unregulated, Kowloon Walled City was for so many years, a stain on the urban fabric of British colonial Hong Kong. This month it has been 20 years since the city was finally demolished and to mark the anniversary, the South China Morning Post published a fascinating and detailed info-graphic, showing what life was like inside the city of darkness… (click to enlarge)

“There was a place near an airport, Kowloon, when Hong Kong wasn’t China, but there had been a mistake, a long time ago, and that place, very small, many people, it still belonged to China. So there was no law there.”

William Gibson, Idoru

The history of the Kowloon Walled City can be traced back as far as the Song Dynasty (960–1279), when it was used as an outpost for managing the trade of salt, but it wasn’t until the British colonists came knocking that Kowloon would become associated with anarchy and lawlessness. By the 19th century it was a walled military fort which the Chinese decided to hold onto after Hong Kong Island was ceded to Britain in 1842– or as William Gibson puts it plainly, ‘when Hong Kong wasn’t China‘. It was China’s way of keeping an eye on the British (much to their annoyance) from a very convenient location, right in the middle of the newly colonized territory.

Kowloon ‘Walled’ City lost its wall during the Second World War when Japan invaded and razed the walls for materials to expand the nearby airport. When Japan surrendered, claims of sovereignty over Kowloon finally came to a head between the Chinese and the British. Perhaps to avoid triggering yet another conflict in the wake of a world war, both countries wiped their hands of the burgeoning territory.

And then came the refugees, the squatters, the outlaws. The uncontrolled building of 300 interconnected towers crammed into a seven-acre plot of land had begun and by 1990, Kowloon was home to more than 50,000 inhabitants. Author William Gibson continues with his notes on the city:

“An outlaw place. And more and more people crowded in; they built it up, higher. No rules, just building, just people living. Police wouldn’t go there. Drugs and whores and gambling. But people living, too. Factories, restaurants. A city. No laws.”

A 1989 Germany documentary takes us on a fascinating tour of the city:

Click here to view the embedded video.

In the 1980s, photographer Greg Girard documented Kowloon Walled City…

Full photostory here

Despite earning its Cantonese nickname, “City of Darkness”, amazingly, many of Kowloon’s residents liked living there. Despite its lack of basic amenities such as sanitation, safety and even sunlight, it’s reported that many have fond memories of the friendly tight-knit community that was “poor but happy”.

“People who lived there were always loyal to each other. In the Walled City, the sunshine always followed the rain,” a former resident told the South China Morning Post.

But as the community began to fascinate architects, photographers and eventually the media, the embarrassment of such living conditions could no longer be tolerated. The site was raised and HK$ 2.7 billion was spent on relocating its residents.

Today all that remains of Kowloon is a bronze small-scale model of the labyrinth in the middle a public park where it once stood.

This isn’t to say places like Kowloon Walled City no longer exist in Hong Kong….

 

Chungking Mansions

A citadel known as the Chungking Mansions is often compared to Kowloon Walled City for its unusual atmosphere, where some 5,000 people from at least 129 different countries are living, working (and lurking) in relative lawlessness….

Image (c) Matthew Field

The Economist decribes the atmosphere at Chungking Mansions in 2011:

“Teeming, crumbling and motley in the extreme, it is a structure to attract or repel the people of Hong Kong [...] Pushtun touts, Nigerians slinging fake Rolexes and a flock of Indian prostitutes in garish saris congregate at its maw. Inside, a glittering and stinking confusion of shops, food stalls and dormitories is piled on itself in an impossible jumble—17 storeys high and covering most of a city block. Is it even a building?”

Dubbed a “Ghetto at the Centre of the World” by anthropologist Gordon Matthews, Chungking was built in 1961 supposedly as a residential building, but today contains more than 90 low-budget hotels, as well as countless curry restaurants, African bistros, mobile phone shops, sari stores, and foreign exchange offices. A tight gathering place for many ethnic minorities in the city, journalist Peter Shadbolt of CNN called it the “unofficial African quarter of Hong Kong.”

(c) Matthaus Wander

In its darkest days during the 80s and 90s, Chungking Mansions was an squalid centre for drugs, gangs and criminal activity, and yet recently, it was elected as the “Best Example of Globalization in Action” by TIME Magazine and has become somewhat of a Hong Kong legend with adventurous tourists. The Lonely Planet guides features Chungking Mansions as 17th out of the 1010 things to do in Hong Kong, and lists it as second out of the 157 architectural and cultural sites in Asia.

A living hell? Or a limbo filling the gap between different economies, where ethnic minorities and asylum workers can hold more cash in their hands at one time than some might have held in their entire lives…

Sources: Gizmodo, South China Morning Post

Images of Kowloon by Greg Girard

:::

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27 Apr 04:48

Canadian University Offers A 'Science Of Batman' Course

science-of-batman-college-course.jpg In further proof I picked the wrong f***ing major, the University of Victoria in British Columbia is offering a 'Science of Batman' course that explores the human body and it's adaptability though the life of Batman. No word if losing both parents at a young age is a prerequisite. And for the record, yes, this makes three Batman related posts in one day. It just sort of happened. It's like falling in love, you know? One minute you're infatuated with a friend's boobs, and the next you realize she's really smart and funny and stuff. Plus is willing to put up with you and do sexy stuff together. That's the purest kind of love. Man, I should make movies like The Notebook. Thanks to Sergey, who signed up for the class hoping they get to take turns punching each other wearing Batsuits.
27 Apr 04:36

Plan Your Digital Death

Have you given any thought to your afterlife --I mean the digital one. Google has. The company says that after you’re gone, it will act as electronic executor for the gigabytes of data left in Gmail and their other digital offerings, based on your instructions.

[More]
25 Apr 13:20

Oh crap — there's evidence that the bubbling reservoir of magma under Yellowstone is fifty percent b

by Annalee Newitz

Oh crap — there's evidence that the bubbling reservoir of magma under Yellowstone is fifty percent bigger than we thought. That's one hell of a mega-volcano.

Read more...

    


25 Apr 07:03

Sam Pearce's Loopwheel: Tangential Suspension for Bikes

loopwheel-01.JPG

Six years ago, industrial designer Sam Pearce was sitting in an airport when "I saw a mother pushing her child in a buggy," he writes. "The front wheel hit a slight kerb [sic] and the child jolted forward because of the impact. It happened several times in the time I was waiting there." He then did what many ID'ers do, which is to find the nearest piece of paper and sketch out a potential solution. What he drew in his notebook was this:

loopwheel-02.jpg

A simple idea for a wheel with built-in suspension.

Two years later, while off-road cycling, he remembered the sketch and began thinking if a suspension system like that could be built into a bike wheel. Now, many years of tinkering later, what Pearce has come up with is this:

loopwheel-03.jpg

It's called the Loopwheel, and its system of "tangential suspension"—essentially leaf springs folded back in on themselves—are not only workable, but they provide a gentler ride over sharp obstacles due to physics:

loopwheel-04.jpg

For now, Pearce is focusing on developing Loopwheels for smaller bikes, because the design "[allows] suspension where suspension can't normally fit," as with a folding bike design.

loopwheel-05.jpg

Last month Pearce debuted his creation at the UK's Bespoked Bicycle show. Response was tremendous, and he's now seeking Kickstarter funding to get the Loopwheel into proper production; up until now he's been making them as one-offs in his shop.

(more...)
    


25 Apr 07:01

Beautiful Knives Made of Wood, Blade and All

Last week, we posted a set of wooden knives and posed the age-old question, "Yea or Nay?" (I, for one, was curious as to how FDRL bonded the metal blades to the wood; based on a verso photo on their site, it looks like they're actually riveted.)

AndreaPonti-Fusion-WoodenKnives.jpg

In any case, Andrea Ponti does them one better. The Italian designer set up shop in Japan after completing his degree at the Politecnico in Milan and his latest project, a series of ultra high-end, handcrafted-in-Kyoto wooden knives, is known as "Fusion" not for their physical attributes—they're made of solid wood—but for their twofold cultural inspiration:

East and West. Industrial design and craftsmanship. Two cultures and two design languages usually far apart from one another blend in the common language of design and tell the story of a project that spans from research to the creation of innovative products for markets around the world. This design and cultural blend produced Fusion: two kitchen knives made of ebony and white maple. Handmade in Kyoto as a limited edition by Japanese artist/craftsman Issei Hanaoka, these knives are inspired by the traditional Japanese art of wood crafting and they have a minimalist design: extremely simple yet modern and universal.

AndreaPonti-Fusion-WoodenKnives-serrated.jpg

AndreaPonti-Fusion-WoodenKnives-handleDetail.jpg

Each of the two sizes is available in either material with an option for a serrated blade (for bread) for a rubric of eight options in all; every Fusion knife features "an ergonomic handle for slip-resistant ultra-comfort grip." Anticipating concerns about care and durability, as was the case for the previously-seen knives, Ponti notes that"the seamless design allows for unparalleled cleanliness and easy care. Thanks to their ultra-fine edge, the knives are extremely sharp but also easy to sharpen."

AndreaPonti-Fusion-WoodenKnives-nonserrated.jpg

(more...)
    


25 Apr 04:23

04/24/13 PHD comic: 'The Shared Office Printer'

Piled Higher & Deeper by Jorge Cham
www.phdcomics.com
Click on the title below to read the comic
title: "The Shared Office Printer" - originally published 4/24/2013

For the latest news in PHD Comics, CLICK HERE!

24 Apr 10:58

When Cheeseburger = Walking, Will We Eat Less?

Would you eat a double cheeseburger if you knew it took two hours of walking to burn it off? Participants in a new study said, hmm, maybe not. The researchers say that exercise-based labels could do a better job than calorie counts at steering people to healthful choices.

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24 Apr 08:10

More Cannovation? '360 Lid' Beer Can Making the Rounds

360-lid-01.jpg

While Budweiser's new bowtie-shaped beer can is a couple of weeks away from launch, a series of smaller breweries have already launched another new type of can: One with a "360 Lid" that peels completely away, allowing tipplers to drink brew through a circular, drinking-glass-like aperture.

360-lid-02.jpg

Here at the Core77 offices we rarely drink beer out of cans. (That's not snobbery; unlike bottles, cans cannot be broken against desks and wielded as weapons during editorial squabbles that devolve into melees.) But the few times we have, we've never had a problem getting beer to pour from the tab-sized opening into our gulping mouths. So why the new can? Pennsylvania-based licenser Sly Fox Brewing Company insists a circular opening "allows the full flavor and aroma of the beer to hit the drinker's senses." And yes, the drinking rim is rounded over, so you don't cut your lips with each swig.

(more...)
    


23 Apr 11:36

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees

by Caroline Williamson

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees

Designer Melody Rees has re-imagined the home in which your fluttering pets take up residence with the Voronoi Bird Cage.

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

The design was digitally printed with a Voronoi pattern embedded into the bright blue material, making it fit into most modern homes. The geometric design is varied but opens up around the center part of the cage to give the birds an optimum view while looking out.

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

The organic texture of the pattern is meant to make the bird feel at home with shadows being cast through the holes much like the sun falls through the branches of a tree.

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

The design flat

Voronoi Bird Cage by Melody Rees in home furnishings Category

Pattern



23 Apr 11:31

Zaha Hadid crowned Veuve Clicquot businesswoman of the year

by Emilie Chalcraft
A. Kachmar

Businessman of the year

Zaha Hadid, photo by Simone Cecchetti

News: Zaha Hadid was named businesswoman of the year at the Veuve Clicquot awards in London last night. (more...)

23 Apr 07:49

Johanna Mårtensson Built a City Out of Bread Just to Watch it Mold

by Tafline Laylin

Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design

The Earth will probably continue to turn long after humans are devoured by rat-size snails or flesh-eating zombies, but A Design award winner Johanna Mårtensson wanted to explore the notion for herself. After testing how various materials biodegrade, the Swedish artist and theater designer built a model city entirely out of bread and then photographed its inevitable decay over the next six months.

Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design Johanna Mårtensson, art, eco-art, food, environment, decay, architecture, photography, photo installation, bread city, moldy bread, Sweden, Stockholm, A-Design, eco-design, green design, sustainable design

Read the rest of Johanna Mårtensson Built a City Out of Bread Just to Watch it Mold


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Post tags: A-Design, Architecture, Art, bread city, decay, eco design, eco-art, Environment, food, green design, Johanna Mårtensson, moldy bread, photo installation, Photography, Stockholm, sustainable design, Sweden








22 Apr 12:45

Celebrity Close-Up, A Collection of Unflattering, Extremely Close Photos of Celebrities

by Kimber Streams

Celebrity Close-Up

Justin Bieber

Celebrity Close-Up is a Tumblr blog featuring uncomfortable and unflattering close-up photos of celebrities.

Celebrity pores, plastic surgery, funny faces, gurning, duck faces, tongues, rhinoplasty, acne, wrinkles, bad teeth, nose hair and other unsightly, unflattering photos of the famous, infamous, beautiful, not-so-beautiful, beautiful people of Hollywood and beyond.

Celebrity Close-Up

Lady Gaga

Celebrity Close-Up

Harry Styles

Celebrity Close-Up

Megan Fox

Celebrity Close-Up

Nicki Minaj

Celebrity Close-Up

Paula Deen

images via Celebrity Close-Up

via Philip Kaplan

22 Apr 12:27

China Wants to Ban Superstition, Mandate Science

by Mandy Oaklander
Click here to read China Wants to Ban Superstition, Mandate Science China's on a mission to ban superstition, according to Reuters. In a rare public forum, the head of China's State Administration of Religious Affairs, Wang Zuoan, announced the government's official position on religion: that it pretty much sucks. More »
    


22 Apr 06:55

Views of Japan c. Late 19th Century via The New York Public...









Views of Japan c. Late 19th Century via The New York Public Library

21 Apr 10:21

Astonishingly Photo-Realistic Surreal Paintings by Jeremy Geddes

by EDW Lynch

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Australian artist Jeremy Geddes creates surreal oil paintings that are astoundingly photo-realistic. The paintings often depict human figures in mid-air, free-falling, or bursting through buildings like cannonballs. To achieve his photo-realistic level of detail, Geddes spends one to six months on each work. For more on Geddes’ artistic process, check out his 2011 interview with Empty Kingdom.

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

Surreal photo-realistic paintings by Jeremy Geddes

via Amusing Planet, Visual News

21 Apr 10:18

Incredibly Intricate String and Denim Portraits by Kumi Yamashita

by EDW Lynch

String and denim portraits by Kumi Yamashita

New York City-based artist Kumi Yamashita creates incredibly labor-intensive portraits out of simple materials. Her “Constellation” portraits are each made of a single thread wound around a network of nails in a process that takes several months. To make her “Warp and Weft” portraits, Yamashita selectively cuts away threads from denim fabric. Her work is on display at the Scott White Contemporary Art gallery in La Jolla, California, April 20 through June 1, 2013. She has much more work on her website.

String and denim portraits by Kumi Yamashita

String and denim portraits by Kumi Yamashita

String and denim portraits by Kumi Yamashita

String and denim portraits by Kumi Yamashita

via Colossal

20 Apr 17:30

Mirae Medical Foundation Health Improvement Centre by Jang Soon Gak and Jay is Working

by Erin

Prof. Jang Soon Gak and Jay is Working have collaborated to design the Mirae Medical Foundation Health Improvement Centre in Seoul, South Korea.

bo_200413_02

bo_200413_01 bo_200413_02 bo_200413_03 bo_200413_04 bo_200413_05

Designers: Jang Soon Gak and Jay is Working

20 Apr 14:12

World's Strangest Flowers

by David Pescovitz

Sierra magazine selected "7 of the World's Strangest Flowers." Above is video of the Touch-Me-Not, native to Central and South America but now growing many other places:

You might easily overlook this herb, with its dainty pink flowers and delicate, fern-like leaves. The mimosa pudica doesn’t just look demure, though. Barely touching its leaves causes them to fold inward and droop downward—hence the flower’s species name, pudica, Latin for “shy, bashful, or shrinking,” as well as its nicknames, “touch-me-not” and “shy plant.” The leaves usually reopen in a few minutes. Other stimuli, including warming and shaking the plant, produce the same phenomenon. The leaves fold and wilt in the evening, too, but they stay that way until sunrise…
"7 of the World's Strangest Flowers" (Thanks, Orli Cotel!)
    


20 Apr 13:25

Storm Thorgerson 1944-2013

by Emilie Chalcraft

Storm Thorgerson Pink Floyd artwork

News: Storm Thorgerson, the British graphic designer who created the iconic album sleeve for Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon, has died aged 69. (more...)

20 Apr 13:19

Ten Top Images on Archinect's "Concrete" Pinterest Board

by Archinect

In case you haven't checked out Archinect's Pinterest boards in a while, we have compiled ten recently pinned images from outstanding projects on various Archinect Firm and People profiles.

Today's top images (in no particular order) are from the board Concrete.

Pavilion Siegen in Siegen, Germany by Ian Shaw Architekten; Photo: Felix Krumbholz

Secondary School, Braamcamp Freire Pontinha in Lisbon, Portugal by cvdb arquitectos; Photo: invisiblegentleman.com

Otsuka-Dofukuten in Kyoto, Japan by Yusuke Seki

Center of Interpretation of Cave Paintings in El Cogul, Lleida, Spain by Prudenci Español

House in Nova Scotia, Canada by Alexander Gorlin Architects

Jindu Sustainable Pavilion in Hangzhou, China by Paul Lukez Architecture

House in Soan Garden, Islamabad, Pakistan by Arkam & Partners

Hotel Básico in Playa del Carmen, Mexico by Central de Arquitectura

Apartment in Brooklyn, NY by Craig Konyk; Photo: Brad Dickson

(Cov...

20 Apr 13:12

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

by lushsight

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

Zed Nelson,英国摄影师,现居伦敦,官方网站:http://www.zednelson.com

这组作品名为《The Family》,开始于1991年,当时Zed的妻子怀孕9个月,从此之后的每一年,他们一家三口都在同一时间拍下一张照片,相同的背景和布光,“只是记录成长的神奇,以及时间和岁月的改变”,目前该项目已持续20年。

以上这幅拍摄于1991年,点击阅读全文可见更多图片。[via]

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1992年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1993年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1994年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1995年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1996年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1997年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1998年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

1999年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2000年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2001年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2002年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2003年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2004年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2005年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2006年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2007年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2008年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2009年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2010年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2011年

Zed Nelson摄影作品:家庭

2012年


Zed Nelson摄影作品:枪的国度

Jason Bell摄影作品

Ciril Jazbec摄影作品

Phillip Toledano摄影作品:Phonesex

Jeremy Sutton-Hibber摄影作品:罗马尼亚吉普赛人
无觅