luccica
defeating entropy with empathy - take and share as needed to ensure ever lasting abundance
don't reserve, restrict or exclude - make mistakes
most of what you see/hear/read/dream here is not made by me except this stuff
credits go to the original creators
luccica
(via 2 | Look At These Chinese Workers Carrying Mind-Blowing Amounts Of Stuff | Co.Exist: World changing ideas and innovation)
Orienta; è qui ora, che decido di fermarmi by quiet ensemble
Orienta; è qui ora, che decido di fermarmi by quiet ensemble
Orienta; è qui ora, che decido di fermarmi by quiet ensemble
some nerve too by ~asruldwi
235 by *anapt
ZoomInfo
theantidote:

Snakes in a Frame: Stunning Photographs of Slithering Beasts
Mark Laita captured plenty of photographs of snakes striking, their mouths agape, in the making of his new book, Serpentine. But, it wasn’t these aggressive, fear-inducing—and in his words, “sensational”—images that he was interested in. Instead, the Los Angeles-based photographer focused on the graceful contortions of the reptiles.
“It is not a snake book,” says Laita. As he explained to me in a phone interview, he had no scientific criteria for selecting the species he did, though herpetologists and snake enthusiasts will surely perk up when they see the photographs. “Really, it is more about color, form and texture,” he says. “For me, a snake does that beautifully.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
MORE PHOTOS »
By Megan Gambino
(via smithsonianmag:)
the year of the snake
theantidote:

Snakes in a Frame: Stunning Photographs of Slithering Beasts
Mark Laita captured plenty of photographs of snakes striking, their mouths agape, in the making of his new book, Serpentine. But, it wasn’t these aggressive, fear-inducing—and in his words, “sensational”—images that he was interested in. Instead, the Los Angeles-based photographer focused on the graceful contortions of the reptiles.
“It is not a snake book,” says Laita. As he explained to me in a phone interview, he had no scientific criteria for selecting the species he did, though herpetologists and snake enthusiasts will surely perk up when they see the photographs. “Really, it is more about color, form and texture,” he says. “For me, a snake does that beautifully.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
MORE PHOTOS »
By Megan Gambino
(via smithsonianmag:)
the year of the snake
theantidote:

Snakes in a Frame: Stunning Photographs of Slithering Beasts
Mark Laita captured plenty of photographs of snakes striking, their mouths agape, in the making of his new book, Serpentine. But, it wasn’t these aggressive, fear-inducing—and in his words, “sensational”—images that he was interested in. Instead, the Los Angeles-based photographer focused on the graceful contortions of the reptiles.
“It is not a snake book,” says Laita. As he explained to me in a phone interview, he had no scientific criteria for selecting the species he did, though herpetologists and snake enthusiasts will surely perk up when they see the photographs. “Really, it is more about color, form and texture,” he says. “For me, a snake does that beautifully.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
MORE PHOTOS »
By Megan Gambino
(via smithsonianmag:)
the year of the snake
theantidote:

Snakes in a Frame: Stunning Photographs of Slithering Beasts
Mark Laita captured plenty of photographs of snakes striking, their mouths agape, in the making of his new book, Serpentine. But, it wasn’t these aggressive, fear-inducing—and in his words, “sensational”—images that he was interested in. Instead, the Los Angeles-based photographer focused on the graceful contortions of the reptiles.
“It is not a snake book,” says Laita. As he explained to me in a phone interview, he had no scientific criteria for selecting the species he did, though herpetologists and snake enthusiasts will surely perk up when they see the photographs. “Really, it is more about color, form and texture,” he says. “For me, a snake does that beautifully.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
MORE PHOTOS »
By Megan Gambino
(via smithsonianmag:)
the year of the snake
theantidote:

Snakes in a Frame: Stunning Photographs of Slithering Beasts
Mark Laita captured plenty of photographs of snakes striking, their mouths agape, in the making of his new book, Serpentine. But, it wasn’t these aggressive, fear-inducing—and in his words, “sensational”—images that he was interested in. Instead, the Los Angeles-based photographer focused on the graceful contortions of the reptiles.
“It is not a snake book,” says Laita. As he explained to me in a phone interview, he had no scientific criteria for selecting the species he did, though herpetologists and snake enthusiasts will surely perk up when they see the photographs. “Really, it is more about color, form and texture,” he says. “For me, a snake does that beautifully.” - Continue reading at Smithsonian.com.
MORE PHOTOS »
By Megan Gambino
(via smithsonianmag:)
the year of the snake
ZoomInfo
darksilenceinsuburbia:

Tom Ziebinski.


http://www.tomziebinski.com/
darksilenceinsuburbia:

Tom Ziebinski.


http://www.tomziebinski.com/
ZoomInfo
layinthefire:

dance in the shutter by `mehmeturgut
layinthefire:

dance in the shutter by `mehmeturgut
layinthefire:

dance in the shutter by `mehmeturgut
nydialilian:

black feather
hifas:

Body Scripture II by Ronit Bigal