#that is so cool

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thecollectibles: Gustav Klimt inspired artworks by selected artists: Siana Park, Petter Faustino, Azthecollectibles: Gustav Klimt inspired artworks by selected artists: Siana Park, Petter Faustino, Azthecollectibles: Gustav Klimt inspired artworks by selected artists: Siana Park, Petter Faustino, Azthecollectibles: Gustav Klimt inspired artworks by selected artists: Siana Park, Petter Faustino, Azthecollectibles: Gustav Klimt inspired artworks by selected artists: Siana Park, Petter Faustino, Az

chill-ghost420:

ofcoursethatsathing:

My eyes just aren’t sure how.

These are called RGB dispersion prisms

you can buy them here…

“spin it. Spin it. Stop talking and spin it.

Aaaaaayyyyyyy!”

exceptionally-minded:

animymind:

Am I officially going crazy or do the imperial admirals in The Bad Batch have two PENS just casually on the left and right side of their uniform???

I first thought those are badges but look at them. It’s a pocket. Those are pens??? What do they need pens for there is no fucking paper in Star Wars

☝️ Actually, those are Imperial code cylinders. All officers of the Imperial Navy are issued with at least one cylinder, which they are ordered to display at all times. Imperial engineers and technicians wear them in special pockets around their neck or on their belt. Only high ranking officers display code cylinders on their jacket.

At major checkpoints, officers who wish to access the next secured area must prove their identity and rank by inserting individualized cylinders into a scomp link, which determines whether the officer has sufficient clearance. Because each cylinder permits access to only specific sectors, high-ranking officers carry up to four, as evident here.

twloha:Roman Ondak began with just a bare white canvas of walls. He was the first one to measure him

twloha:

Roman Ondak began with just a bare white canvas of walls. He was the first one to measure himself against the wall. The exhibit was then open to others who were also encouraged to add a piece of themselves to the artwork. He entitled it Measuring the Universe and soon the walls were covered in names of people with different heights and stories. An estimated 90,000 people have written their names to help contribute to the piece of growing and living art.

“I think it really does begin to make you think about ideas of space in the universal and the infinite in a really interesting way but it is also very, very personal and this sense of this kind of white void when the exhibition opened being slowly built by all of these points, these names and it is almost like a kind of constellation of stars.” 

(Images via MoMA)


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floridensis:

omusa-inola:

floridensis:

omusa-inola:

great-and-small:

floridensis:

uh yeah no problem i literally live for this

Something similar happened to me with a weird crustacean I posted and I was dancing on the wind for weeks

OP can we see said caterpillar?

Imagine seeing an insect - it happens all the time, not a rare or wondrous occasion by any general sense, yet… Between 15,000 and 18,000 new species are identified each year, half of those discoveries being insects.

That spider in your home, could be unidentified, new. The flies on your windshields, fresh creations.

Years ago I found a huge grub in a friends garden. Took it home in a jar speared with a fork for breathing holes. Put it in a bowl of dirt - Moth larvae will bury underground to metamorphosize - I carefully dug into the dirt when the leaves were falling. A beautiful umber leathery cocoon sat, quietly greeting me. All winter I kept it inside, warm. Carefully moved from one room to another. Come spring, I thought they would not come out. Come summer, I was left with a casing I thought empty. One night, one breathtaking night, a moth larger than my partner’s hand, or mine appeared. The Pandora Sphinx Moth was free, and she spread her wings and took to the night sky. I never knew a moth like her could exist in Colorado.

At any given moment, it’s estimated there are 10 quintillion individual insects alive. Be curious! Who knows what we will discover next. There in your backyard, local park, leaflitter in the city, some new, wonderous thing lives.

heres the first ever picture of an as-of yet undescribed leaf miner moth! featuring my dog! i just took him out for his walk one day and saw something on a leaf, i didnt even know it was evidence of a bug, i thought it might be a fungus or something. i posted it to inaturalist and after identifying the host tree, a leafminer expert informed me that that tree was not a known host of anything this might be, and it was almost certainly an undescribed species of moth.

i eventually collected some more leaves that still had larvae/pupae living inside to mail to him so he could raise them to adulthood and work on classifying them

look at that!! a whole new moth!!

theres just so many bugs in the world!! you just never know!!

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