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Random things from throughout the day.
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60 / REBLOGjesuisperdu:

hervé sévéno
237 / REBLOGn-a-s-a:

Suspension Bridge Solargraph 
Credit & Copyright: Justin Quinnell
Explanation: The six month long exposure compresses the time from December 17, 2007 to June 21, 2008 into a single point of view.
11143 / REBLOGthescienceofreality:

Super Moon? How About a Super Sun!“On May 5, 2012, while everyone else was waiting for the “Super Moon” astrophotographer Alan Friedman was out capturing this super image of a super Sun from his back yard in Buffalo, NY!Taken with a specialized telescope that can image the Sun in hydrogen alpha light, Alan’s photo shows the intricate detail of our home star’s chromosphere — the layer just above its “surface”, or photosphere.Prominences can be seen rising up from the Sun’s limb in several places, and long filaments — magnetically-suspended lines of plasma — arch across its face. The “fuzzy” texture is caused by smaller features called spicules and fibrils, which are short-lived spikes of magnetic fields that rapidly rise up from the surface of the Sun.On the left side it appears that a prominence may have had just detached from the Sun’s limb, as there’s a faint cloud of material suspended there.”
14 / REBLOGpolychroniadis:

Raoul Hausmann - Mechanical Toys, 1957.
1764 / REBLOGhenrytheworst:

RIP - Maurice Sendak

oldhollywood:

Poster art: Batiste Madalena edition (via)

Up until the 1950s, many movie theaters rejected the mass-produced, lithographed film posters designed and distributed by Hollywood studios in favor of original, hand-painted posters created by local artists. 

During the 1920s, Batiste Madalena was the resident artist at the Eastman Theatre in Rochester, NY., where he designed and hand-painted about eight original posters per week. Madalena, who is considered the greatest poster painter of the period, was given full artistic control, with the only directive from his boss being that the posters had to be clearly visible to passengers on passing trolley cars.

More examples of Madalena’s work here

891 / REBLOGlife:

Aerial view of two tractors in field plowing trench-like furrows in methods called “listing” to counteract wind and “contouring” furrows plowed at right angles to the slopes to hold any rain, in order to save top soil against the ravages of dust storms.
See more work from Margaret Bourke-White here.