Shared posts

04 Jan 01:59

Silk Me Back – Arterial Kimono

by Vanessa Ruiz

Silk Me Back Arterial Kimono FMR

Silk Me Back Arterial Kimono FMR detail

Silk Me Back Arterial Kimono FMR

FMR Silk Me Back Arterial Kimono writing

Gorgeous kimono featuring the human arterial system designed by FMR for an exhibition in France, called Silk Me Back at the Nesle Gallery. Created to support victims of the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster, this exhibition featured 25 stunning kimonos like the one above. All of the kimono’s will be auctioned off on February 9th, 2013 in the Westin-Paris Vendôme hotel in Paris. Profits will be donated to KNK Japan/Children Without Borders and the Furusato Project.

If you look closely, you can see that the arterial system on the silk kimono is all handwritten with text from the Buddhist Sutta.  Stunning detail down to the drops of blood on the collar!

Read more about the exhibit and view more of the kimonos at Pink Julep who attended the exhibit back in October.

 

[via Gorellaume]

 

04 Jan 01:57

Queer Pirate Plane (merritt kopas)

by Porpentine

queer pirate plane

A game I put together in a few hours on New Year’s Eve for friends to play at a party I was unable to attend.[Author's description]

[Play Online]

 

 

04 Jan 01:57

MASTABA SNOOPY (gods17)

by Porpentine
José Bruno Barbaroxa

joguinho SINISTRO.

mastaba snoopy

[Play Online]

 

04 Jan 01:56

The distance between the Earth and Moon is 238,900 miles. Most...



The distance between the Earth and Moon is 238,900 miles. Most people get this very, very wrong.

03 Jan 03:23

Maneater, Aaron Jasinski - - - Follow Aaron Jasinski on...



Maneater, Aaron Jasinski

- - -

Follow Aaron Jasinski on Tumblr HERE!

03 Jan 01:39

Minecraft Reality for iOS

easily the nicest augmented reality app I've seen  
03 Jan 01:38

Tenth Grade Tech Trends

like danah boyd's ethnographic studies, always good to get a different perspective  
03 Jan 01:38

Mickey Mouse in the Haunted House

by Cobwebs

Early-period Mickey was quite a bit less sanitized than today’s mouse.

(See also Hell’s Bells. Demonic cow, you guys.)

03 Jan 01:37

What could have entered the public domain today?

works published in 1956 would've been available, but we're stuck waiting until 2052  
03 Jan 01:35

A Pickpocket's Tale

A Pickpocket's Tale:

The spectacular thefts of Apollo Robbins.

03 Jan 00:58

cats are satan’s children



cats are satan’s children

28 Dec 18:55

The Worst-Dressed Man in the World 2012: Russell Brand

28 Dec 18:51

An outfit for all seasons.

by Jessica Hagy

Share and Enjoy:DiggStumbleUpondel.icio.usFacebookTwitterGoogle Bookmarks

28 Dec 18:51

Communion

The local police, growing increasingly concerned about this church, ask parishioners to take a sip of wine and then spit it back out for DNA testing. It's blood, and it matches a 1970s murder victim.
28 Dec 18:50

Bizarre beauty contests

by Chelsea Nichols
To me, beauty contests are pretty strange things to begin with: something about women being paraded on stage to have their bodies evaluated like cattle at an agricultural fair rubs up against every feminist impulse in me. That is not … Continue reading →
28 Dec 18:50

true facts - angler fish



true facts - angler fish

http://ashow.zefrank.com/episodes/90
28 Dec 18:50

Proof

The prosecution calls Gottfried Leibniz.
28 Dec 18:49

12/27/12

I’m having second thoughts about this threesome.

28 Dec 18:49

The Stars are Right

by Propnomicon
In commemoration of the apocalypse, Jason McKittrick brings us this outstanding Cthulhu artifact. I really like the geometry of the piece. Trying to sculpt smooth spirals is a lot harder than he makes it look. Although the linked page says it's no longer available I believe a quirk of the Mayan calendar means it's still possible to order until tonight.


28 Dec 18:49

The Lutin

by Jacob Petersson
Following the death of François de la Motte, Baron d'Aulnoy a curious entry appears in the house inventory- item nr 1443, a preserved "Lutin" under blown glass dome. 
The item was presumably donated to the curiosity cabinet of king Louis XIV. It disappeared however, during the turbulence of the revolution and the current whereabouts of the Lutin d'Aulnoy remain unknown.  






An ordinary hovering french gnome-mummy, a Lutin to be precise. This was a commissioned project and I can't take credit for the idea. 
Starting to accumulate a little collection of fae folk here, I like it, They are very fun to do. (Reminder to self- get better camera.)

28 Dec 18:48

Merry Christmas.



Merry Christmas.

28 Dec 18:48

White Velvet, Gaetan Henrioux



White Velvet, Gaetan Henrioux

28 Dec 18:48

Sprouts, Lorena Alvarez Gomez

28 Dec 18:47

Astronomy classes ruined my sense of romance

by Jenny the bloggess

Friend:  I love this quote… “Good friends are like stars.  You don’t always see them, but you know that they are always there.”

me:  Actually, many of the stars we currently see are already burnt-out and dead, but we just don’t know it yet because their light is still traveling toward us.

Friend:  Fine.  We’ll change it.  ”Good friends are like stars…

me:  …They’re very shiny but a lot of them might be dead.”

Friend:  And once again, you ruin the romance with logic.

me:  Well some might not be dead yet.  Although technically if they’re not already dead they’re most likely currently in flames.

Friend:  *sigh*

me:  How about this?:  ”Most of your friends are dead, but the ones who aren’t dead are on fire.  It’s complicated to explain, but it’s nice to watch from a distance.  Much like friendship.”

Friend:  Yeah.  That’s almost exactly the same sentiment.

me:  It’s a gift.

28 Dec 18:46

Book review: Counter-Tourism: the Handbook

by Gordon MacLellan

Here is a treat for anyone who has wandered round a historic site, bored by the expected and provided routes and interpretations. Counter-Tourism by Crab Man (Triarchy Press 2012) is a challenge, an invitation and a license for the gentle naughtiness of doing the unexpected thing.

Counter-Tourism: The HandbookWalking through the rooms of some stately home at your own unpredictable speeds, seeing how much dust you can collect, wandering round the outside of a property….the principles embedded here are about independence, imagination and personal experience. A lot of these activities remind me of how young children get to know a place. They wander. They run or walk or just stop and look under beds and wonder about secrets, treasures and horrible hidden stories.

That sense of childish exploration is what makes these ideas interesting for me from a magical perspective. There are activities here that might help us step out of our own preconceptions of a site and meet it afresh. We might find new experiences that could shape words or ceremonies or suggest new places for meditations. Simply reviewing how we meet a site – whether it is one we know well or one we are encountering for a first time, there is an opportunity for improvisation, ideas to structure an intriguing walking meditation or to encourage a mindful awareness

There is an underlying cynicism about the heritage industry: “Visitor centres are machines for the contraction, disguise, obscuring and hollowing out of the places they propose themselves as portals to”. Maybe not entirely fair – we all know of effective interpretation that invites us in and welcomes us to a place without controlling too much and limiting our experience too much (or I hope we do!). And that perspective may upset some professionals, seeing themselves as skilled interpreters of a place, the people who know best. But the theme here (that I endorse fully) is that visitors deserve the freedom to take what they will from a place, echoing arguments that people learn what they want to learn and learn best when they are choosing their own learning styles – and also that every site offers far more to experience than we offer in our planned interpretive and educational experiences. (And if that ruffles a few interpretive feathers, they probably needed the ruffling!)

People explore places in their own ways and this book champions that independence. Counter-tourism offers visitors some sneaky alternatives to the often controlled and sanitised experiences we are offered at sites, inviting us to find our own ways of getting to know a place. And for all those professionals who reckon they’ve got their interpretation processes sussed, these books challenge us to explore sites in new ways, offering activities to shake conceptions a bit.

So have a read, have a think, wander, try and do, use these activities or just relax into some new ones of your own – as an interpreter, as a visitor or simply as someone out to get to know this world we walk on.

For more information on counter-tourism, visit the Counter-Tourism website.

28 Dec 18:45

Michael Pollan Presents an Edible Education, A Free Online Course From UC Berkeley

by Colin Marshall

When seized with the desire to learn where their food comes from, many of today’s readers turn to Michael Pollan, author of books like The Omnivore’s Dilemma, In Defense of Food, and Food Rules. Perhaps you know him as the guy who popularized the guiding words, “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.” If you’ve studied at the University of California, Berkeley, you might also know him as a professor at their Graduate School of Journalism. Possessed of both a journalist’s curiosity about sources and processes and a professor’s ability to explain — not to mention based in the same consciously hedonistic city that gave rise to Alice Waters’ Chez Panisse — Pollan has positioned himself well to remain America’s foremost public intellectual of the edible. Who else would UC Berkeley want to lead their Edible Education courses?

Above you’ll find Pollan’s opening session for the latest Edible Education lecture series, “Telling Stories About Food and Agriculture.” Open to members of the public as well as Berkeley students, the course examines the real and potential effects of the way we eat food and how that food gets to us in the first place. Other lecturers include theatre director Peter Sellars, radio producers the Kitchen Sisters, and “rock star of social justice writing” Raj Patel. Having “passed” the class, look into our archives and you’ll find the ideal follow-up for next semester: Harvard University’s Science and Cooking: From Haute Cuisine to the Science of Soft Matter, also free online. Never before has a practical education on our everyday food been so easily accessible — or as lively.

Both courses mentioned above appear in our collection of 600 Free Courses Online.

Related content:

Michael Pollan’s Book, Food Rules, Brought to Life with Animation

Michael Pollan on Sustainable Food

Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on literature, film, cities, Asia, and aesthetics. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.

Michael Pollan Presents an Edible Education, A Free Online Course From UC Berkeley is a post from: Open Culture. You can follow Open Culture on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and by Email.

28 Dec 18:44

Some Days The Rabbit Hole Goes Pretty Damn Deep.

by jessamyn

Compute! Magazine Issue 045

seanmpuckett tells the story of how he wrote a BASIC program to play a Merlin-like game which made it into Computer magazine and was later the subject of an article in Mathematics Magazine.

28 Dec 18:44

Decay: Zombies Invade the Large Hadron Collider in Movie Made by Ph.D. Students

by Colin Marshall

Though far from the most astute scholar of physics or zombie cinema, I have to believe that this marks the first time physicists have made a contribution to the field. But perhaps only they would think to set their movie inside the Large Hadron Collider, the European Organization for Nuclear Research’s particle accelerator of record-setting size and power. (Hands up if you even knew one could go inside it.) The device has received much press for its potential to either prove or disprove the existence of a predicted elementary particle called the Higgs boson, and Decay speculates about one particular consequence of this high-profile scientific quest: what if the Higgs boson turns people into zombies? Doing his Ph.D. at the University of Manchester, writer-director Luke Thompson realized that — and here I quote the press release — “the tunnels under CERN would be ideal for a zombie film.” £2000, a couple borrowed cameras, and a great deal of scavenged props and improvised filmmaking gear  later, we can watch the whole thing free online.

Thompson’s entry into the zombie canon follows “a small group of students (played by physicists) after a disastrous malfunction in the world’s biggest particle accelerator. As they try desperately to escape from the underground maintenance tunnels, they are hunted by the remains of a maintenance team, who have become less than human.” This use of actual young physicists running around the actual nooks and crannies of CERN lends the project a scrappy realism, and the practice of making do with any resource at hand has a proud history in zombie filmmaking. Recall that George A. Romero, shooting the genre-defining Night of the Living Dead (also free to watch on the internet), could only raise $6,000 at a time, which forced him to find horror wherever he could. Like every strong zombie picture, Decay not only operates on meager resources but performs a certain social satire as well, in this case to do with how the nonscientific world perceives science. But no need to take it too seriously: “This film has not been authorized or endorsed by CERN,” reads the first title card. “It is purely a work of fiction.” Whew.

via Metafilter

Related content:

Watch Night of the Living Dead, the Seminal Zombie Movie, Free Online

Troma Entertainment, the Maker of Acclaimed B-Movies, Puts 150 Free Films on YouTube

The Large Hadron Collider Rap, Yo

The Higgs Boson, AKA the God Particle, Explained with Animation

Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on literature, film, cities, Asia, and aesthetics. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall.

Decay: Zombies Invade the Large Hadron Collider in Movie Made by Ph.D. Students is a post from: Open Culture. You can follow Open Culture on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and by Email.

28 Dec 18:43

Tweeria

turns Twitter activity into a lazy RPG  
28 Dec 18:43

Yes, I've Been To The Mütter Museum

by jessamyn

Mutter Museum
Mutter Museum by John H. Kim (cc by)

"What other unconventional places in the world feature an equivalent mix of amazement, craziness and depth?"