unbearable lightness.
Molly from Montana, currently in Colorado.
unbearable lightness.
girlpacific:

awkwardsituationist:

a minke whale passes under andrew peacock’s kayak in neko harbour in the antarctic peninsula 

Oh my goodness!
cosascool:

Anna Gillespie
ryandonato:

Vietnamese paper artist Nguyễn Hùng Cường creates origami pieces in a style that is distinctively his own. His pieces often begin with dó paper – a unique paper, made from the bark of the rhamnoneuron balansae, that is traditionally made throughout many of Vietnam’s villages. Typically striving to create his work from only one sheet of paper, he has been known to often fold work from a single bill of Vietnamese money. Nguyễn has been working in origami since he was just a small child creating his first original piece at ten years old.
alabamapines:

bros
ohmeh:

i remade again, follow me again if you were one of my followers! :)
humansofnewyork:

“I love her randomness.”“Tell me about a time she was random.”“Three hours ago. I went to pick her up, and I found her double-dutching on the sidewalk with some kids. Then she went inside and came out wearing this.”
honeyishrunkmypenis:

levanna:

Yep.

May do this when I graduate with my Masters

Fongwei Liu
humansofnewyork:

“Just trying to stay inspired in a tumultuous world.” 
ZoomInfo
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
sagansense:

“World of Averages” - composite images culled from thousands of individual portraits resulting in symmetrical average faces. 
via awkwardsituationist
We are not separate from each other. Bounded by our truest link - molecular biology, not stereotypes, classes, country, creed, labels, race or color. We are humans. We are Earthlings.
ZoomInfo
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
kim-jong-chill:

this is the best instagram
ZoomInfo
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
blackgirlsupremacy:

Black excellence circa 1966
eatsleepdraw:

Media: Ink on paper.
Forest guide
ZoomInfo
beingblog:

icphoto:

The Story Behind Robert Capa’s Pictures of D-Day
Today is the 69th anniversary of D-Day, the beginning of the massive Allied invasion of western Europe to confront Hitler’s forces during World War II. Robert Capa famously made some of the only surviving pictures of the invasion on Omaha beach, which was chaotic, in part due to wind and current. The beach rockets intended to stun the Germans arrived too early and the aerial bombs landed too far inland. Many infantrymen deemed it suicidal to attempt to cross the open beach, so the waterline was soon mobbed with crouching, pinned-down men without officers to lead them forward. Capa, who had crossed the Channel with the soldiers, remained photographing on the beach for about an hour and a half that morning until his film was used up. He then boarded a ship to take him off the beach, which subsequently was hit and sank, and then made it back on another boat, where medics were treating the wounded. He arrived back in Weymouth, England, on the morning on June 7, handed his film to the Army courier, and returned to France.
When his film arrived in the Life London office that evening, there were four rolls of 35mm film (one of them probably unexposed) and half a dozen rolls of 2 1/4 film. Capa included a note with his films saying that the action was all on the 35mm rolls. Picture editor John Morris told photographer Hans Wild and the young lab assistant, Dennis Banks, to rush the prints. When the film came out of the developing solution, Wild looked at it wet and told Morris that although the 35mm negatives were grainy, the pictures were fabulous. A few minutes later, Banks burst into Morris’s office, blurting out hysterically, “They’re ruined! Ruined! Capa’s films are all ruined!” Because of the necessary rush to get prints on the flight to New York for the next edition of Life, he had put the 35mm negatives in the drying cabinet with the heat on high and closed the door. With no air circulating, the film emulsion had melted. Although the first three rolls had nothing on the film, there were images on the fourth. The film Capa had shot with his Rollei before and after the actual landings had not been put into the drying cabinet and so survived intact.
Although ten of the 35mm negatives were usable, the emulsion on them had melted just enough so that it slid a bit over the surface of the film. Consequently, sprocket holes—which would normally punctuate the unexposed margin of the film—cut into the lower portion of the images themselves. Ironically, the blurring of the surviving images may actually have strengthened their dramatic impact, for it imbues them with an almost tangible sense of urgency and explosive reverberation.
Written by Cynthia Young, ICP Curator of the Capa Archives

The backstory to history is as interesting as the photos themselves.
beingblog:

icphoto:

The Story Behind Robert Capa’s Pictures of D-Day
Today is the 69th anniversary of D-Day, the beginning of the massive Allied invasion of western Europe to confront Hitler’s forces during World War II. Robert Capa famously made some of the only surviving pictures of the invasion on Omaha beach, which was chaotic, in part due to wind and current. The beach rockets intended to stun the Germans arrived too early and the aerial bombs landed too far inland. Many infantrymen deemed it suicidal to attempt to cross the open beach, so the waterline was soon mobbed with crouching, pinned-down men without officers to lead them forward. Capa, who had crossed the Channel with the soldiers, remained photographing on the beach for about an hour and a half that morning until his film was used up. He then boarded a ship to take him off the beach, which subsequently was hit and sank, and then made it back on another boat, where medics were treating the wounded. He arrived back in Weymouth, England, on the morning on June 7, handed his film to the Army courier, and returned to France.
When his film arrived in the Life London office that evening, there were four rolls of 35mm film (one of them probably unexposed) and half a dozen rolls of 2 1/4 film. Capa included a note with his films saying that the action was all on the 35mm rolls. Picture editor John Morris told photographer Hans Wild and the young lab assistant, Dennis Banks, to rush the prints. When the film came out of the developing solution, Wild looked at it wet and told Morris that although the 35mm negatives were grainy, the pictures were fabulous. A few minutes later, Banks burst into Morris’s office, blurting out hysterically, “They’re ruined! Ruined! Capa’s films are all ruined!” Because of the necessary rush to get prints on the flight to New York for the next edition of Life, he had put the 35mm negatives in the drying cabinet with the heat on high and closed the door. With no air circulating, the film emulsion had melted. Although the first three rolls had nothing on the film, there were images on the fourth. The film Capa had shot with his Rollei before and after the actual landings had not been put into the drying cabinet and so survived intact.
Although ten of the 35mm negatives were usable, the emulsion on them had melted just enough so that it slid a bit over the surface of the film. Consequently, sprocket holes—which would normally punctuate the unexposed margin of the film—cut into the lower portion of the images themselves. Ironically, the blurring of the surviving images may actually have strengthened their dramatic impact, for it imbues them with an almost tangible sense of urgency and explosive reverberation.
Written by Cynthia Young, ICP Curator of the Capa Archives

The backstory to history is as interesting as the photos themselves.
beingblog:

icphoto:

The Story Behind Robert Capa’s Pictures of D-Day
Today is the 69th anniversary of D-Day, the beginning of the massive Allied invasion of western Europe to confront Hitler’s forces during World War II. Robert Capa famously made some of the only surviving pictures of the invasion on Omaha beach, which was chaotic, in part due to wind and current. The beach rockets intended to stun the Germans arrived too early and the aerial bombs landed too far inland. Many infantrymen deemed it suicidal to attempt to cross the open beach, so the waterline was soon mobbed with crouching, pinned-down men without officers to lead them forward. Capa, who had crossed the Channel with the soldiers, remained photographing on the beach for about an hour and a half that morning until his film was used up. He then boarded a ship to take him off the beach, which subsequently was hit and sank, and then made it back on another boat, where medics were treating the wounded. He arrived back in Weymouth, England, on the morning on June 7, handed his film to the Army courier, and returned to France.
When his film arrived in the Life London office that evening, there were four rolls of 35mm film (one of them probably unexposed) and half a dozen rolls of 2 1/4 film. Capa included a note with his films saying that the action was all on the 35mm rolls. Picture editor John Morris told photographer Hans Wild and the young lab assistant, Dennis Banks, to rush the prints. When the film came out of the developing solution, Wild looked at it wet and told Morris that although the 35mm negatives were grainy, the pictures were fabulous. A few minutes later, Banks burst into Morris’s office, blurting out hysterically, “They’re ruined! Ruined! Capa’s films are all ruined!” Because of the necessary rush to get prints on the flight to New York for the next edition of Life, he had put the 35mm negatives in the drying cabinet with the heat on high and closed the door. With no air circulating, the film emulsion had melted. Although the first three rolls had nothing on the film, there were images on the fourth. The film Capa had shot with his Rollei before and after the actual landings had not been put into the drying cabinet and so survived intact.
Although ten of the 35mm negatives were usable, the emulsion on them had melted just enough so that it slid a bit over the surface of the film. Consequently, sprocket holes—which would normally punctuate the unexposed margin of the film—cut into the lower portion of the images themselves. Ironically, the blurring of the surviving images may actually have strengthened their dramatic impact, for it imbues them with an almost tangible sense of urgency and explosive reverberation.
Written by Cynthia Young, ICP Curator of the Capa Archives

The backstory to history is as interesting as the photos themselves.
beingblog:

icphoto:

The Story Behind Robert Capa’s Pictures of D-Day
Today is the 69th anniversary of D-Day, the beginning of the massive Allied invasion of western Europe to confront Hitler’s forces during World War II. Robert Capa famously made some of the only surviving pictures of the invasion on Omaha beach, which was chaotic, in part due to wind and current. The beach rockets intended to stun the Germans arrived too early and the aerial bombs landed too far inland. Many infantrymen deemed it suicidal to attempt to cross the open beach, so the waterline was soon mobbed with crouching, pinned-down men without officers to lead them forward. Capa, who had crossed the Channel with the soldiers, remained photographing on the beach for about an hour and a half that morning until his film was used up. He then boarded a ship to take him off the beach, which subsequently was hit and sank, and then made it back on another boat, where medics were treating the wounded. He arrived back in Weymouth, England, on the morning on June 7, handed his film to the Army courier, and returned to France.
When his film arrived in the Life London office that evening, there were four rolls of 35mm film (one of them probably unexposed) and half a dozen rolls of 2 1/4 film. Capa included a note with his films saying that the action was all on the 35mm rolls. Picture editor John Morris told photographer Hans Wild and the young lab assistant, Dennis Banks, to rush the prints. When the film came out of the developing solution, Wild looked at it wet and told Morris that although the 35mm negatives were grainy, the pictures were fabulous. A few minutes later, Banks burst into Morris’s office, blurting out hysterically, “They’re ruined! Ruined! Capa’s films are all ruined!” Because of the necessary rush to get prints on the flight to New York for the next edition of Life, he had put the 35mm negatives in the drying cabinet with the heat on high and closed the door. With no air circulating, the film emulsion had melted. Although the first three rolls had nothing on the film, there were images on the fourth. The film Capa had shot with his Rollei before and after the actual landings had not been put into the drying cabinet and so survived intact.
Although ten of the 35mm negatives were usable, the emulsion on them had melted just enough so that it slid a bit over the surface of the film. Consequently, sprocket holes—which would normally punctuate the unexposed margin of the film—cut into the lower portion of the images themselves. Ironically, the blurring of the surviving images may actually have strengthened their dramatic impact, for it imbues them with an almost tangible sense of urgency and explosive reverberation.
Written by Cynthia Young, ICP Curator of the Capa Archives

The backstory to history is as interesting as the photos themselves.
beingblog:

icphoto:

The Story Behind Robert Capa’s Pictures of D-Day
Today is the 69th anniversary of D-Day, the beginning of the massive Allied invasion of western Europe to confront Hitler’s forces during World War II. Robert Capa famously made some of the only surviving pictures of the invasion on Omaha beach, which was chaotic, in part due to wind and current. The beach rockets intended to stun the Germans arrived too early and the aerial bombs landed too far inland. Many infantrymen deemed it suicidal to attempt to cross the open beach, so the waterline was soon mobbed with crouching, pinned-down men without officers to lead them forward. Capa, who had crossed the Channel with the soldiers, remained photographing on the beach for about an hour and a half that morning until his film was used up. He then boarded a ship to take him off the beach, which subsequently was hit and sank, and then made it back on another boat, where medics were treating the wounded. He arrived back in Weymouth, England, on the morning on June 7, handed his film to the Army courier, and returned to France.
When his film arrived in the Life London office that evening, there were four rolls of 35mm film (one of them probably unexposed) and half a dozen rolls of 2 1/4 film. Capa included a note with his films saying that the action was all on the 35mm rolls. Picture editor John Morris told photographer Hans Wild and the young lab assistant, Dennis Banks, to rush the prints. When the film came out of the developing solution, Wild looked at it wet and told Morris that although the 35mm negatives were grainy, the pictures were fabulous. A few minutes later, Banks burst into Morris’s office, blurting out hysterically, “They’re ruined! Ruined! Capa’s films are all ruined!” Because of the necessary rush to get prints on the flight to New York for the next edition of Life, he had put the 35mm negatives in the drying cabinet with the heat on high and closed the door. With no air circulating, the film emulsion had melted. Although the first three rolls had nothing on the film, there were images on the fourth. The film Capa had shot with his Rollei before and after the actual landings had not been put into the drying cabinet and so survived intact.
Although ten of the 35mm negatives were usable, the emulsion on them had melted just enough so that it slid a bit over the surface of the film. Consequently, sprocket holes—which would normally punctuate the unexposed margin of the film—cut into the lower portion of the images themselves. Ironically, the blurring of the surviving images may actually have strengthened their dramatic impact, for it imbues them with an almost tangible sense of urgency and explosive reverberation.
Written by Cynthia Young, ICP Curator of the Capa Archives

The backstory to history is as interesting as the photos themselves.
indefenseofart:

A rare color photograph of Auguste Rodin with his sculpture Eve.  photographed in 1907 by Edward Steichen