
This is from who knows where. But it come’s from Yimmy’s Yayo tumblr, Visual crack for the ocular fiend.
It has so much great stuff.
via | Yimmy’s Yayo

This is from who knows where. But it come’s from Yimmy’s Yayo tumblr, Visual crack for the ocular fiend.
It has so much great stuff.
via | Yimmy’s Yayo


The Visible Body features:
This thing is useful for the bones and muscles for me but I’m sure anyone that needs to go deeper would find this useful as well.

this guy rocks. must see all his work on his site, Stuntkid.com

Documenting really bad Photoshop work in the professional publication world. Some really funny ones…
via | New Work

via | Fail Blog
There’s probably a million out there but this one is pretty cool.

Portrait Illustration Maker >>
Here’s me, teafordinner: 
yay fail dog blog.

this is a spinoff of the original fail blog.
so hilarious
and here is my own fail creation:
http://barackobamaisyournewbicycle.com/
“Barack Obama helped you move a sofa”
“Barack Obama picked you up at the airport”
“Barack Obama followed you on twitter”
…
what a great guy. thx mudpuddles!
http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/sci_cult/courses/beauty/web5/rusala.html
This is an interesting paper by a student at Bryn Mawr College by the name of Rachel Usala. It talks about the relationship between pain and beauty, but as the disclaimer states, is in no way meant to be authoritative.
Some good stuff:
The intensity of real pain, emotional or physical, makes us more receptive and alert to beauty.
…
The ultimate paradox is the relationship between beauty and pain. Pain can result in beauty by transforming people into stronger individuals, but we strive to eliminate most of the suffering in the world. The more pain and conflict we eliminate from our own personal experience, the more potential beauty that could result from suffering is lost. We become more and more unable to relate to the sufferers of pain because we lose their aesthetic perspective. Self-inflicting pain can create a kind of localized and transient cultural beauty, yet to inflict pain on others is not beautiful.
It is significant, however, that the pain-beauty relationship is a paradox and not a contradiction. Small, painful cultural practices that we use to beautify ourselves are avenues for us to express our roles as contributing, integrated members of society. We need pain to remind us of our vulnerability and make us constantly alert and aware of the beauty of the world around us, but we also need its end because the resolution is part of the aesthetic experience. Tension implies resolution.
Yup, that’s how it goes.
http://thankyouandywarhol.com/

These 2 critters give a million thanks to Andy Warhol. Try to not shoot yourself. Cute for about 12 seconds.
http://www.npr.org/programs/totn/features/2008/02/memoir/gallery/index.html

These are really cool. So much in just 6 words.

This website, Plan 59, has a ton of mid 1900s advertising illustration.
I think she thinks that jam is some sort of ram’s blood.