

Oh hey, here’s Wendell’s face:
–OH YEAH–
I redid the mobile stuff for the site. Now, all the comics will stack vertically, which should be a whole lot better for reading on a phone! If you see any problems, lemme know!

I’m a little late, but whatev.
The Kickstarter for my first book can’t happen without your help! We’re just under $4,000 now!
Photograph by Raja Subramaniyan, National Geographic Your Shot
A young girls face is painted for a festival honoring the guardian deity Angalamman, the fiercest form, evoked in participants expressions. The festival is held every year in the village of Kaveripattinam in Tamil Nadu, India.
This photo was submitted to Your Shot, our storytelling community where members can take part in photo assignments, get expert feedback, be published, and more. Join now

Over the last year, French artist Julien Salaud has installed several new works as part of his “Stellar Cave” series involving elaborate thread drawings illuminated by ultraviolet light. The polygonal depictions of people, animals, and zoomorphic figures are meant to evoke the idea of star constellations with allusions to mythology and mysticism. Salaud works with cotton thread coated in ultraviolet paint wrapped around precisely placed nails on ceilings or gallery walls. One of his largest installations, Stellar Cave IV, was recently on view at the Hezliya Museum of Contemporary Art. More on Facebook. (via My Modern Met)









Todo cuidado é pouco com conclusões precipitadas, ainda mais na nossa área..
O Acelerato é uma ferramenta ideal para quem procura resolver esse e mais problemas no departamento de help desk. Como, por exemplo, a falta de comunicação e o não acompanhamento da qualidade do atendimento prestado aos clientes.
Como o nome mesmo já diz, o Acelerato busca agilizar a atividade do help desk com recursos importantes como abertura de chamados por email, consulta ao histórico de conversas, pesquisa de satisfação, relatório de produtividade entre muitas outras funções.
CLIQUE AQUI e saiba mais!
…
Post publieditorial.
100% true story. I did finish the ice cream, but I felt terrible afterwards for a good while.
–I’M THE WORST COMIC DAD–
Invisible Bread turned four years old a week and some ago and I didn’t even notice! It always comes right after ECCC, but this year, the weeks after ECCC were a busy mess.
But more importantly, this has been a really great four years. I’ve met some really amazing people because of this comic and things keep getting better and better. So, to everyone reading this down here, thank you so much for reading the comics. I hope they’ve been able to put some quality smiles on your faces and maybe even make a crummy day feel a little better =)
–PST–
Invisible Bread Volume 3 is available in the store!

All images © Jessica Fulford-Dobson





Australian skateboarder Oliver Percovich created the non-profit Skateistan in 2007, a grassroots project that connects youth and education through skateboarding in Afghanistan. The organization, which has since grown to an award-winning international NGO, caught the attention of London-based photographer Jessica Fulford-Dobson and inspired her to visit the program in Kabul in 2012—especially after learning 45% of the students were female.
In Afghanistan skateboarding has spread to become the number one sport for women, as they are forbidden to ride bicycles. Soon after arriving and entering the girl’s world, Fulford-Dobson was accepted by the young Afghan skateboarders. She photographed the girls with natural light, helping to expose their personalities through simple portraits. Within the images you can see the girls’ natural confidence, images that capture the subjects both posed and candidly skating through the indoor facility.
“I met so many impressive women and girls in Afghanistan: a teacher as tough and determined as any man; young Afghans in their early twenties who were volunteering at an orphanage and were passionate about being seen as strong and willing to fight for themselves, rather than as victims of circumstance; and girls who were being educated to be leaders in their communities and who were already thinking carefully about their own and their country’s future,” said Fulford-Dobson.
Fulford-Dobson won 2nd prize in the 2014 Taylor Wessing Photographic Portrait Prize with Skate Girl, 2014 (one of the photographs taken while on location in Kabul) and her exhibition Jessica Fulford-Dobson: Skate Girls of Kabul opens at Saatchi Gallery in London on April 15 and runs until April 28, 2015. You can donate to Skateistan’s program in Kabul as well as other cities here. (via feature shoot)
SAD SACKS Season 01 - Episode 45 See MORE COMICS at: sadsacks.ca