
You know, sitting naked in a pile of leaves and twigs. Not to mention the tiny little bugs that could potentially be crawling into every crevice. Blech.
View the full photo by chrisnyback on Flickr (BOOBIES, so don’t click if you’re at work).
November 2, 2009 @ 10:48 pm

You know, sitting naked in a pile of leaves and twigs. Not to mention the tiny little bugs that could potentially be crawling into every crevice. Blech.
View the full photo by chrisnyback on Flickr (BOOBIES, so don’t click if you’re at work).
October 4, 2009 @ 10:27 am
Athlete just released their brand-new music video for the song “Black Swan Song” off of the album Black Swan. Watch the music video above, it’s beautiful. :)
September 8, 2009 @ 6:36 pm

This little installation by Jack Williams uses 350 Royal Pine air fresheners to create a floating forest.
This is one of my fears I didn’t even know I had. I would hate to be in a room filled with Royal Pine air fresheners because while they look nice, they certainly do not smell nice.
March 22, 2009 @ 4:22 pm

I really like this photo taken by Martin Hunter of an abandoned car in a run-down part of Glasgow, Scotland.
January 28, 2009 @ 10:57 am

Anna shared this amazing composite image of Manhattan that shows the left side of the island as it was 400 years ago and the right side as it looks today.
The image was created by Markley Boyer and used in a New York Times piece about the history and potential future of Manhattan island.
Per acre, Sanderson writes, Mannahatta had more ecological communities than Yellowstone, more native plant species than Yosemite, more birds than the Great Smoky Mountains.
“If Mannahatta existed today as it did then, it would be a national park,” Sanderson says. “It would be the crowning glory of American National Parks.”
But it doesn’t, which leaves Sanderson to wonder what New York will look like 400 years from now.
It’s weird to think that a city as big as New York could have potentially been a National Park. I didn’t even know it was as green as it was depicted here. But I guess that would make sense since everything 400 years ago was probably green all over.