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Cool post from Friends of Type: Stormy

Posted | Views: 14,684

Stormy explaining how he did this crazy, amazing type. Check it out.

 

"I got some inquires from people asking how this post was done. It’s a relatively easy process. 1. Pick a typeface 2. Print it out 3. Cut it up (for mine each letterform was cut into 5 pieces) 4. Reconfigure the letterforms, glue it down 5. Scan it, done."



4 Eyes

Posted | Views: 14,581


The Strokes - Under Cover Of Darkness

Posted | Views: 18,550

The Strokes



Rawlins Calderone, designing my dream home.

Posted | Views: 14,004

Ah, my dream summer home...

These architects are solid. Check out more of their work.RawlinsCalderone.com



Helmo is great work.

Posted | Views: 14,792

Helmo, c'est Thomas Couderc et Clément Vauchez. Nous sommes graphistes. Nous concevons des affiches, des livres,
des signalétiques, des images, un peu de typographie... Nous pensons aussi par moments des interventions a l'échelle du corps

ou de bâtiments... Le champ du graphisme est large. Nous avons créé en 2002 La bonne merveille, avec Thomas Dimetto.


Nous avons travaillé sous cette signature a 3 mains pendant 5 ans. Début 2007, dans le souci de préserver la liberté de création de chacun,
notre groupe se recompose : Thomas Couderc et Clément Vauchez créent Helmo, tandis que Thomas Dimetto développe Tburo. 

La bonne merveille reste néanmoins ce qu'elle a toujours été depuis le début : le nom de l'atelier dans lequel nous travaillons tous les trois
à Montreuil, et qui accueille au gré des affinités d'autres créateurs.



Skulls

Posted | Views: 14,520


Thank Goodness It's Friday. Yeah Dude!

Posted | Views: 14,082


Juicy, Juicy Lucy

Posted | Views: 15,688


Floating Figures.

Posted | Views: 15,677

This is so rad. I don't know who did this. I would totally check out their site. This is really clever I wonder how it was done? If anyone has any idea who did these, let me know.  Enjoy, I sure did. Total dreamy eye dessert.



CUBEN -2010, pretty sweet.

Posted | Views: 13,777


Big Karate Fail in NYC

Posted | Views: 13,833

KARATE CHOPPER IN NEW YORK CITY.

Karate Chop fail in the city. You do know, you should practice before you do a demonstration in New York City? People will video it and thousands of people will see it if you fuck up. You know that right?



Erik Marinovich design, sick!

Posted | Views: 15,979


Vintage Batman

Posted | Views: 23,305


Cool boots.

Posted | Views: 17,683

WHOA, OUTER SPACE DOC MARTINS

WORD!



Kinda scary after what happen in Japan.

Posted | Views: 14,716

On March 19, the moon will swing around Earth more closely than it has in the past 18 years, lighting up the night sky from just 221,567 miles (356,577 kilometers) away. On top of that, it will be full. And one astrologer believes it could inflict massive damage on the planet.

Richard Nolle, a noted astrologer who runs the website astropro.com, has famously termed the upcoming full moon at lunar perigee (the closest approach during its orbit) an "extreme supermoon."

When the moon goes super-extreme, Nolle says, chaos will ensue: Huge storms, earthquakes, volcanoes and other natural disasters can be expected to wreak havoc on Earth. (It should be noted that astrology is not a real science, but merely makes connections between astronomical and mystical events.)

 

But do we really need to start stocking survival shelters in preparation for the supermoon? The question is not actually so crazy. In fact scientists have studied related scenarios for decades. Even under normal conditions, the moon is close enough to Earth to make its weighty presence felt: It causes the ebb and flow of the ocean tides. The moon's gravity can even cause small but measureable ebbs and flows in the continents, called "land tides" or "solid Earth tides," too. The tides are greatest during full and new moons, when the sun and moon are aligned either on the same or opposite sides of the Earth.According to John Vidale, a seismologist at the University of Washington in Seattle and director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network, particularly dramatic land and ocean tides do trigger earthquakes. "Both the moon and sun do stress the Earth a tiny bit, and when we look hard we can see a very small increase in tectonic activity when they're aligned," Vidale told Life's Little Mysteries, a sister site to SPACE.com.

 

At times of full and new moons, "you see a less-than-1-percent increase in earthquake activity, and a slightly higher response in volcanoes."

The effect of tides on seismic activity is greatest in subduction zones such as the Pacific Northwest, where one tectonic plate is sliding under another. William Wilcock, another seismologist at the University of Washington, explained: "When you have a low tide, there's less water, so the pressure on the seafloor is smaller. That pressure is clamping the fault together, so when it's not there, it makes it easier for the fault to slip."

 

According to Wilcock, earthquake activity in subduction zones at low tides is 10 percent higher than at other times of the day, but he hasn't observed any correlations between earthquake activity and especially low tides at new and full moons. Vidale has observed only a very small correlation.

 

What about during a lunar perigee? Can we expect more earthquakes and volcanic eruptions on March 19, when the full moon will be so close?

The moon's gravitational pull at lunarperigee, the scientists say, is not different enough from its pull at other times to significantly change the height of the tides and thus the likelihood of natural disasters. 

"A lot of studies have been done on this kind of thing by USGS scientists and others," John Bellini, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey, told Life's Little Mysteries. "They haven't found anything significant at all."

Vidale concurred. "Practically speaking, you'll never see any effect of lunar perigee," he said. "It's somewhere between 'It has no effect' and 'It's so small you don't see any effect.'"

 

The bottom line is, the upcoming supermoon won't cause a preponderance of earthquakes, although the idea isn't a crazy one.

"Earthquakes don't respond as much to the tides as you'd think they would. There should actually be more of an effect," said Vidale.

Most natural disasters have nothing to do with the moon at all. The Earth has a lot of pent up energy, and it releases it anytime the buildup gets too great. The supermoon probably won't push it past the tipping point, but we'll know for sure, one way or the other, by March 20.

Will March 19 'Supermoon' Trigger Natural Disasters?



Back in the Club Days

Posted | Views: 139,738

Here are some pictures from my solo show I had over the summer at the Wynwood Exhibition Center. The canvas's that were shown were paintings I created in nightclubs right after I moved back to Miami from attending college at the Maryland Institute, College of Art.

 

I did the paintings with no intention of exhibiting them anytime soon. Since I thought the work would make more sense in the long term. But, I got to show them and I got mixed feelings which is what I was expecting. I was a little nervious to show them since it is not my current direction and people often misunderstand the context of where can artist can go. I, for one explore an area and let it go - then move on to the next journey.

LAST SUMMER

BACK IN THE CLUB DAY'S EXHIBIT



Epic

Posted | Views: 15,050

EPIC



Look's like PeeWee's

Posted | Views: 15,480

Biter, looks like Peewee's bike. Poser.



Dirty New York Food Vendors

Posted | Views: 13,706

Dirty New York

Food Vendors

This is so nasty. Good thing I never stop at any vendors even if I'm hungry. I've always had a funny feeling about them. But, I could never  get my finger on it (No point intended).  Next time you get a hot dog…it might have feet and ass bacteria. True New York Stank!!