The 'Time Warp Wives' believe that life, especially marriage, was far more straightforward in the Thirties, Forties and Fifties and have taken radical action to escape of modern life.
Shot at Toronto's Centre Island. A great example of being in the right place at the right time. My sister and I went to the Island after work for some photos and this amazing sunset started to form, so I quickly put the camera on a tripod and started shooting intervals (using the Pclix) for about an hour hoping to capture the lightning. I have 5 lightning shots out of around 600 photos and this is the best one.
For a bigger size suitable for desktop wallpaper, check out the flickr post.
Wednesday (August 13, 2008), the Census Bureau confirmed that by 2042 the United States will no longer have a racial majority, that whites will no longer be the majority. Who knows. Maybe the new Census Bureau (CB) data means nothing. Maybe its irrelevant and only caucuses more harm than good.
What do you think?!
Don’t wait, vote today! The poll closes this Friday, August 22nd.
While electro pop doesn't usually produce self-depreciating images of woe and rain clouds, this single from In Ghost Colours, tries to reintroduce cartoonish humor as a justification for sensitivity.
Whether or not you’re a fan of the genre, it seems common cultural knowledge that hip-hop emerged from the black and Puerto Rican communities, initially in New York and soon after in Chicago, Los Angeles, and across the nation. The notion that hip-hop could ever find validation within our nation’s enclaves of white nationalism seems ludicrous. But believe it or not, there is white power hip-hop out there.
No cameras or lights were used. Instead two technologies were used to capture 3D images: Geometric Informatics and Velodyne LIDAR. Geometric Informatics scanning systems produce structured light to capture 3D images at close proximity, while a Velodyne Lidar system that uses multiple lasers is used to capture large environments such as landscapes. In this video, 64 lasers rotating and shooting in a 360 degree radius 900 times per minute produced all the exterior scenes.
"Work No. 850 centers on a simple idea: that a person will run as fast as they can every thirty seconds through the gallery. Each run is followed by an equivalent pause, like a musical rest, during which the grand Neoclassical gallery is empty.
This work celebrates physicality and the human spirit. Creed has instructed the runners to sprint as if their lives depended on it.
This was inspired by GRL's "Throwies" project, and the building and implementation of this was done by a complete separate group of Tibet activitists. They combined a traditional protest banner with over five hundred throwie lights and batteries sewn and taped onto the banner.