The Interwander |
Seeing what else is in the world. |
Liverpool Anglican Cathederal by ihughes22 on Flickr.
Liverpool: Below But Not Under by Eric The Fish (2012) on Flickr.
Queensbury library. An old building reflecting Queensburys past.
Quote of the day #Lockerz
Ever wanted to know the mathematics behind your favorite moves? Now you can.
(via really-shit)
Look deep into my eyes, FEED US. FEEEEEEEED US.
Cue spinny vortex image. Diddly dum diddly dum, diddly dum, dum dum dum, diddly dum………………….. (Taken with Instagram)
Go away! (Taken with Instagram)
In 1960, U.S. Air Force pilot Joseph Kittinger flew thirty kilometers straight up into the sky using a pressurized, high-altitude balloon. This very nearly made him the first man in space.
Mr. Kittinger free-fell for over twenty kilometers - at which point he was moving so fast that he broke the sound barrier.
He had all but left the earth’s atmosphere; the sky around him was pitch black; he could see the outlines of entire continents; and the haiku-like abstraction of his available reference points – earth, balloon, space – made it impossible to tell if he was really falling.
Does this sound like fiction? Luckily, there’s a film.
(Source: jonyorkblog, via adrifts)
Steven Toang, Death Star.
NO! I’m not getting off your legs (Taken with Instagram)
I now have a TARDIS corset that I made! I feel special. Be envious!
Also, IT’S BIGGER ON THE INSIDE
Pencil drawings by Paula Bird.
Andrea Benge, Beautiful eye of death.
between tides
Scott Mutter (1944–2008) was an American photographer best known for the use of photomontage.