Easter eggs and fun facts you never realized on Big Bang Theory.
Portfolio & Services One of my favorite shots from the trip. At Patterson Point, my namesake, along the east coast of Baranof Island along the inside passage of southeast Alaska. POTW (Picture of the Week) Winner at wetpixel.com/competition/index.php?view=competition&i..., Week #251 for Nudibranchs, Cowries, Snails. 102 total entries. Thanks!
Inspired in part by the classic horror literature of H.P. Lovecraft, artist Jim Kazanjian (previously) assembles foreboding buildings using snippets of photographs found in the Library of Congress archives. Equal parts secret lair, insane asylum, and the work of a deranged architect, Kazanjian’s collages are created from 50-70 separate photographs taken over the last century. Each piece takes nearly three months to complete as he painstakingly searches for just the right elements, a process he likens to “solving a puzzle, except in reverse.” From his artist statement: I’ve chosen photography as a medium because of the cultural misunderstanding that it has a sort of built-in objectivity. More
I think I've already grumbled about my miserable experience of trying to buy Barbies and Barbie accessories that portray Barbie in a positive, strong, smart, realistically career-oriented way -- so I won't grouse about that again. I'll just give this Kickstarter campaign some love. I can't pony up the $200+ dollars to actually get the final product, but I'm throwing some money at the campaign in the hope that Mattel will notice this guy's effort to create bad-ass Barbie gear. Also - this suit of armor is awesome and wicked lovely. Finally - Jim Rodda, the designer/creator, is from Wisconsin, my home state. This makes me very, very happy. The inspiration for this armor came, indirectly, from my four-year-old niece. I wanted to print something unique for her next birthday, and so decided to design and engineer a pair of My Little Pony-compatible glitter cannons. (Note to self: next Kickstarter should involve My Little Pony-compatible glitter cannons.) But! Moving parts and springs can be tough to do at this level of 3D printing, and after a few test prints I became frustrated and fell back on my usual method for generating new ideas: drinking three lattes and taking a hot shower. Midway through my fourth latte, the idea to create 3D printed armor for Barbie sprang from my head, fully formed. Faire Play: Barbie-Compatible 3D Printed Medieval Armor by Jim Rodda / Zheng3 — Kickstarter (via Incredible Things)
If the moon smiled, she would resemble you. You leave the same impression of something beautiful, but annihilating.
This extraordinary image of a crow apparently riding on an owl was only a runner up in the prestigious Wildlife Photographer of the year competition.
He's know for playing geeky scientist Sheldon Cooper on The Big Bang Theory, but Jim Parsons really stepped up his fashion game to appear in the March issue of GQ magazine.
Big Bang's Jim Parsons Is Gay: But Was He Ever In The Closet?
"Are you free for dinner tonight?"