posterous
Watch the books dance around while the clock spins in this time-lapse video.
Kazuki Nakamura and Kenichi Izuhara designed a house that has slides connecting each level, Cool.
In the 1950s in California someone invented a retractable fifth wheel to aid in parking. It looks cool.
"Just when you thought the producers of "That's It, That's All" couldn't top themselves comes a new breed of snowboarding entertainment.
The Art of FLIGHT follows Travis Rice, John Jackson, Mark Landvik, Scotty Lago, Jake Blauvelt, Nicolas Muller, Gigi Ruf, DCP and Pat Moore as they dream up new global adventures and progress the sport to unimaginable levels.
Brain Farm has gathered an arsenal of the most advanced and progressive film making technology to bring the masses a snowboarding adventure of epic proportions Filmed on location in Jackson Hole, Alaska, Chile, Aspen, Patagonia, British Columbia and more, FLIGHT brings the viewer along for the perfect blend of adventure/travel drama and high-energy snowboarding action. The Art of FLIGHT releases September 2011"
If you've ever wondered what all those strange modes on your camera do, this may answer your questions...
The artist and designer Candy Chang has become the outer wall of an abandoned house in New Orleans in a table. Passers-by can now write with chalk their desires and goals that they have before they die. After only one day, all gaps were filled.
Is there anything that hasn’t been created from Lego bricks? Fine Clonier ran a contest that invited people to create historical figures out of Legos. Mark Twain below was the overall contest winner. Bookalicious recently posted some of the literary figures featured in the contest.
“The images are screenshots from Google Earth with basic color adjustments and cropping. I am collecting these new typologies as a means of conservation – as Google Earth improves its 3D models, its terrain, and its satellite imagery, these strange, surrealist depictions of our built environment and its relation to the natural landscape will disappear in favor of better illusionistic imagery. However, I think these strange mappings of the 2-dimensional and the 3-dimensional provide us with fabulous forms that are purely the result of algorithmic processes and not of human aesthetic decision making. They are artifacts worth preserving.”
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