thedailywhat:

The Last Meals of Death Row Inmates

For his latest project “No Seconds,” photographer Henry Hargreaves recreated and documented the last meals requested by some of the most notorious executed criminals in history.

thedailywhat:

The Last Meals of Death Row Inmates

unculturedmag:

Thomas Grunfeld - Misfit (1996)
German artist Thomas Grünfeld has created a wide variety of artworks in different medium over his career. On of his stand out series is ‘Misfits’ a collection of hybrid taxidermy animals. You could describe these pieces as animals collages as they meld two different animals together, one being the body and one the head. The creations are real but they appear to be the sort of creatures dreamed up by children.

unculturedmag:

Thomas Grunfeld - Misfit (1996)

German artist Thomas Grünfeld has created a wide variety of artworks in different medium over his career. On of his stand out series is ‘Misfits’ a collection of hybrid taxidermy animals. You could describe these pieces as animals collages as they meld two different animals together, one being the body and one the head. The creations are real but they appear to be the sort of creatures dreamed up by children.

On BBC iPlayer, well worth the watch.

Balloon Bag Eng.

How To Hide An Airplane Factory

During World War II the Army Corps of Engineers needed to hide the Lockheed Burbank Aircraft Plant to protect it from a Japanese air attack. They covered it with camouflage netting to make it look like a rural subdivision from the air.

First photo: Before

Second: After

Third and Fourth: Underneath

Shanghai 1990 vs 2010

Shanghai 1990 vs 2010

Motoi Yamamoto - Saltscapes

A Japanese artist travels to the salt flats of western Utah to discuss life, death, rebirth, and making art from salt.

(Source: vimeo.com)

Mike Winnard - Slice and Dice

octobermuses:

mattlehrer:

Apocalyptic photos from theMTA.

woah fuck that is so weird i have chills

(via cassieisme)

Nadav Kander’s Yangtze, The Long River.

Kander’s documentation of the Yangtze River, China that runs over 6,500km from Qinghai Province in it’s most westernly point through to Shanghai in the east. The Yangtze River has 1/18 of the world’s population living upon it. Travelling against the current Kander documents this journey.

(Source: nadavkander.com)

The age old question.