#snowflakes

LIVE

I’m planning a few posts in the near future, but I’m wondering which topic interests people more.

The topics I’m considering:

  • Mirrors of different shapes: I’ll explore how rays and waves are reflected by different shapes, and some interesting properties of these shapes. I have more ideas beyond the typical parabolic/elliptical/spherical mirrors, so I’m sure there’ll be more than the usual here.
  • Bees & voting systems: I’ll explore alternative voting systems being proposed, but from a less techy & more intuitive and visual perspective. I’ll also explain how bees have been using a system for millions of years and trillions of elections, and what we may be able to learn from them.
  • Snowflakes: I’ll explore current research on how snowflakes are formed, what causes their symmetry and, hopefully, have an interactive, physics-based snowflake generator as opposed to the typical geometric ones you find everywhere.
  • Exponential growth: I’ll explore how exponential growth appears in Nature and how our perception of these phenomena are inherently limited and potentially dangerous. I’ll not go be going into the typical Malthusian population angle on this.

For all of these I’m hoping to include some interactive simulation or visualization.

If you have a Twitter account, be sure to cast a vote!

when the snow wont stick so you gotta take pics of it while its falling when the snow wont stick so you gotta take pics of it while its falling 

when the snow wont stick so you gotta take pics of it while its falling 


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Say whatever you like about the Night Circus, but it is undeniably pleasing that you can never eat t

Say whatever you like about the Night Circus, but it is undeniably pleasing that you can never eat the same snowflake twice there. (Believe me, we’ve assured it - there’s magic afoot to make sure that we never repeat a single icy crystal when it comes to topping this spicy, warming gingercake…)


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 Happy 1st of December ❄ Let’s welcome the month of lights, snow and feasts! ☃‪Stay tuned for

Happy 1st of December ❄ Let’s welcome the month of lights, snow and feasts! ☃
Stay tuned for more pictures of Lily’s Christmas preparations


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Black and turquoise snowflakes! Tutorial for this look on thehuntofficialblog’s page now!  Flo

Black and turquoise snowflakes! Tutorial for this look on thehuntofficialblog’s page now! 

Flossgloss in ‘Wet’ available now from livelovepolish.com/wp


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meaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing anmeaningfulsilence:Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatovthis is amazing an

meaningfulsilence:

Micro-photography of individual snowflakes by Alexey Kljatov

this is amazing and crazy! 


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“No two snowflakes are alike”

Snowflakes caught on black velvet then captured by light sensitive plates

“Under the microscope, I found that snowflakes were miracles of beauty; and it seemed a shame that this beauty should not be seen and appreciated by others. Every crystal was a masterpiece of design and no one design was ever repeated., When a snowflake melted, that design was forever lost. Just that much beauty was gone, without leaving any record behind.”

“A careful study of this internal structure not only reveals new and far greater elegance of form than the simple outlines exhibit, but by means of these wonderfully delicate and exquisite figures much may be learned of the history of each crystal, and the changes through which it has passed in its journey through cloud-land. Was ever life history written in more dainty hieroglyphics!”

Wilson Bentley (1865-1931)


Biography from the Museum of Everything

Wilson Snowflake Bentley was a farmer, entrepreneur, meteorologist and artist, who dedicated his life to the photography of snow.

Born in 1865 to a poor country family in Vermont, Bentley’s imagination was first sparked by his mother’s gift of a microscope on his 15th birthday. Bentley taught himself how to use the contraption, combined it with a Bellow’s camera and embarked upon his creative journey.

By the age of 20, Bentley had taught himself how to immortalise the structure of frozen water on glass plates. Over the next 40 years, he would assemble a vast encyclopaedia of scientific abstraction, photographing several thousands of individual snowflakes and frosts.

Bentley’s achievements led to a greater understanding of the uniqueness, importance and beauty of this natural form. Yet Bentley was far more than a passionate hobbyist. He was a self-styled outlier and adventurer, who realised the potential of microphotography to capture the impossible individuality of each and every crystalline flake.

In his lifetime, Bentley proselytised his discoveries across the United States, sending prints and plates to Museums, Universities and more. The public and press championed his achievements; yet the scientific and cultural communities of the time were often reluctant to welcome the innovations of this pioneering image maker.

Today, over one hundred years later, Bentley’s photographs are celebrated not simply as science, but as art. His microphotographs are featured in public and private collections worldwide, and are regularly curated in exhibitions such as Massimiliano Gioni’s The Keeper at the New Museum in New York (2016) and The Museum of Everything in Rotterdam (2016) and Australia (2017/18).

Wilson Snowflake Bentley died of pneumonia after being caught in a snowstorm in 1931.


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“Snow was falling,/so much like stars/

filling the dark trees/that one could easily imagine/its reason for being was nothing more/than prettiness.”—Mary Oliver

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