un-exotic:

jesdaniels:

briisk:

ex-oti-c:

ex-oti-c:

i wish i could paint like this :’(

oh hi me

Amazing

🌸🌼

wow

un-exotic:

jesdaniels:

briisk:

ex-oti-c:

ex-oti-c:

i wish i could paint like this :’(

oh hi me

Amazing

🌸🌼

wow

(via pernnotporn)


No great artist ever sees things as they really are. If he did, he would cease to be an artist.

(via autopsyturvey)


thecatsintophats:


Kitten on a giant water lily leaf, Philippines, 1935.  (Alfred T. Palmer for National Geographic).
“Now more commonly called the giant water lily—reaching eight feet across and staying afloat by means of a substantial amount of air trapped in the spaces between its ribs—the plant is strongest at its center and can hold up to a hundred pounds.”

thecatsintophats:

Kitten on a giant water lily leaf, Philippines, 1935.  (Alfred T. Palmer for National Geographic).

“Now more commonly called the giant water lily—reaching eight feet across and staying afloat by means of a substantial amount of air trapped in the spaces between its ribs—the plant is strongest at its center and can hold up to a hundred pounds.”

(via autopsyturvey)


Francisco Lachowski (or close enough) and the process of drawing him




artruby:

Lorenzo Quinn, Vroom vroom (2011).

(via autopsyturvey)


Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist
Pablo Picasso (via les-fille-fatale)

(via autopsyturvey)


the-absolute-best-posts:

notmyvirginears:
A diver has a very personal moment of dejection at the bottom of the pool during the 2012 CCCA Swimming and Diving State Championships at East Los Angeles College Swim Stadium on Thursday, April 26, 2012 in Monterey Park, CA. (Photo by Suzanne Tylander © 2012) This particular photo represents an emotional moment rarely caught underwater. This particular diver was expected to win the entire event. The diver knew as soon as he hit the water his form was flawed and that he might have just lost it all. I was fortunate enough to witness this moment as it was unfolding underwater. I captured the sequence of emotion just a split second after he hit the water and began to sink to the bottom with a sense of defeat written in his body language This was the image I chose from the series. I have felt this emotion and disappointment before as many athletes do. My chance to capture it underwater was rare but beautiful. It is a moment no competitive athlete wants to relive but something important that many of us can relate to. It is raw and human and real.
This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.

the-absolute-best-posts:

notmyvirginears:

A diver has a very personal moment of dejection at the bottom of the pool during the 2012 CCCA Swimming and Diving State Championships at East Los Angeles College Swim Stadium on Thursday, April 26, 2012 in Monterey Park, CA. (Photo by Suzanne Tylander © 2012) This particular photo represents an emotional moment rarely caught underwater. This particular diver was expected to win the entire event. The diver knew as soon as he hit the water his form was flawed and that he might have just lost it all. I was fortunate enough to witness this moment as it was unfolding underwater. I captured the sequence of emotion just a split second after he hit the water and began to sink to the bottom with a sense of defeat written in his body language This was the image I chose from the series. I have felt this emotion and disappointment before as many athletes do. My chance to capture it underwater was rare but beautiful. It is a moment no competitive athlete wants to relive but something important that many of us can relate to. It is raw and human and real.

This post has been featured on a 1000notes.com blog.

(via cheedles)


sexlock:

ANGST

Kaneda needs to wake the fuck up.

(via cheedles)