In the latest addition to the put-big-numbers-in-context genre, here’s the history timeline of our planet in the context of 100 yards.
Tags: big numbers, football
In the latest addition to the put-big-numbers-in-context genre, here’s the history timeline of our planet in the context of 100 yards.
Tags: big numbers, football

The team over at Nervous System recently designed this fun Infinite Galaxy Puzzle that tiles continuously in any direction. Pieces from the top can be removed and added to the bottom, and likewise from side to side. So regardless of where you start the puzzle can continue in a seemingly infinite series of patterns. Each puzzle is printed with satellite imagery obtained from NASA and includes a few themed pieces like an astronaut, shuttle, and satellite. Apparently the puzzles were wildly popular and are now available as a pre-order for 2017.
More info: Nervous System (h/t: colossal, mymodernmet)








Why did the chicken cross the universe?


No carga más rápido que un cargador normal, no te permite viajar en el tiempo ni en el espacio, no es compatible con los enchufes de tu pared europea y no ha sido diseñado ni testeado por el doctor Emmett Brown.
Dejando aparte esos pequeños detalles, el Back to the Future Flux Capacitor Wall Charger es perfecto.

Visto en Geeksaresexy

Archive: Southern Coast of Iceland (Archive: NASA, Space Shuttle, 08/97) by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center on Flickr.
Archive: Southern Coast of Iceland (Archive: NASA, Space Shuttle, 08/97)

Hundreds of dwellings - all painted in a vibrant red color - make up Larung Gar, the world’s largest Buddhist institute. The settlement is located in a remote valley in Tibet and contains a population that has grown to approximately 20,000 people since its founding in 1980. In recent years, the Chinese government has started to systemically demolish homes and force thousands of occupants out of Larung Gar, claiming the settlement is too crowded and unsafe. They have also closed off the area to all foreigners. Many Tibetans fear the erosion of their language, traditions, and ways of worship in the midst of these incursions by the Chinese government.
32.1356°N 100.4565°E
Learn more in the NY Times here: http://nyti.ms/2gBrxo0
Framestore and ILM collaborated on this Star Wars Rogue One x Nissan Rogue spot.
Working with Framestore LA I worked across all the UI screens and the materialization hologram effects
Framestore Credits:
Creative Direction: Ben West
Design Direction: Duncan Elms
Design: Michael Rigley, Duncan Elms, Matt Shadis, Will Golladay.
Animation: Michael Rigley, Mark Feldman, Duncan Elms, Matt Shadis, Humberto Reynaga.
Comp Lead: Wesley Cronk
Cast: Duncan Elms
Tags: UI, film ui, holagrams, holograms, Huds and Guis, motoin design, motion graphics design, Insurgent, design, Sci Fi, Movie graphics, duncan elms, trapcode form and after effects
Simon Fitz est un photographe allemand de 26 ans. Frustré par ses études, déterminé à poursuivre sa passion pour la photographie, il a commencé la photographie en étant inspiré par certains magazines tels que Trasher, Desillusion Magazine et What Youth. Baignant dans l’univers du surf et du voyage, il capture de rares moments de liberté.

Spraying water on a magnesium fire.

Illustrating 50 historical dates with typography, an excellent project created by designers Levan Patsinashvili and David Babiashvili, who portray the numbers in a creative way, reflecting the events of each date. From the sinking of the Titanic to the Boston Tea Party, through the birth of Microsoft or the assassination of Kennedy, a clever and nice way to learn history!
h/t: boredpanda



















































Each week we had to quickly create visual solutions to three quotes based on the shows weekly theme. This is a selection of my favorites.
Design and Animation: duncanelms.com
Production Company: Zapruder's Other films
Cast: Duncan Elms
Tags: Stuff Said, Motion Graphics, design, type, animation, kinectic type, quotes, duncan elms, after effects and facebook

A young male orangutan makes the 30-metre climb up the thickest root of the strangler fig high above the canopy in Gunung Palung national park, one of the few protected orangutan strongholds in Indonesian Borneo. Laman had to do three days of climbing to position several GoPro cameras that he could trigger remotely. This shot was the one he had long visualised, looking down on the orangutan within its forest home. Photograph: Tim Laman