Using a home-made mixture of bioluminescent resin, Miya Ando meticulously coated a thousand leaves and floated them in a small pond. During the day, the coating absorbed light energy from the sun.
Once night arrived, each leaf could be seen emitting miraculous hues of blue and purple.
Installation in Puerto Rico is Comprised of 1000 Bioluminescent Leaves
Photos by L. Young; via Over-think
We spotted these impressive double exposure portraits by Heitor Magno today and had to share them. Lucky for you, we’ve also got a DIY guide to playing with double-exposure.
These Double Exposure Portrats are a Must See for Inspiration
via I Need a Guide
Either Philip Barlow refuses to wear glasses or he’s just really good at painting out of focus scenes.
Wethinks the latter.
via Liz Dalay on Pinterest; The Jealous Curator
Either Philip Barlow refuses to wear glasses or he’s just really good at painting out of focus scenes.
Wethinks the latter.
via Liz Dalay on Pinterest; The Jealous Curator
(via theshelteredlife)
Still one of my favorite photos I’ve taken.
A Year in Oddities by Brock Davis
2012 was a year, I think we can all agree on that. What precise type of year it was is kind of up to you, but was it a year in which you made things happen or one in which the things happened to you? Brilliant conceptualist and player with things of myriad types and scopes, Brock Davis spent 2012 taking countless photos of the things he made happen to other things: and those things were pretty damn sweet. Keep yourself updated with more things that Brock does over at his instagram.
Alejandro Kirchuk takes some of the most magical photos of fútbol we’ve ever seen.
You can find even more of his ongoing photo project about fútbol in Argentina at the link.
ADN Fútbol, a Photo Project on Fútbol in Argentina
via mpdrolet
So Kevin Day photographed the same tree over a period of 5 years! Check out his Flickr set and see how everything but the tree changes..
The Same Tree Photographed for 5 Years Straight
via Inspirezme
We’re not sure how it was shot, but this photo by Csaba Tökölyi is a masterpiece!
via Phytos
To educate people on the growing amount of plastic in our oceans, Kim Preston photographed household objects transformed into the sea creatures they can impact.
Photographs of Everyday Plastic Items Transformed into Sea Creatures
via Join Bklyn
The premise behind David Nemcsik’s Levitation series is, “where were you in your last dream?” The floating bodies mimic our sleeping shapes in a far away dreamland.
David went on to use this series for his entrance exams at University. Whoever reviewed his file must have been blown away.
Levitation Series Explores Where We Go When We Dream
via Zeutch
this makes me feel sick to my stomach :S