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Pixie In White No.3: Photo by Photographer Kelvin Bernard Photographer's Request for Critique --Kelvin Bernard Ballerina and her tutu Thank you for your comments. Biswajit Pandey , October 31, 2006; 10:51 A.M. Dear Kelvin Poetry in motion. Regards Is this comment helpful? Richard Hans , November 01, 2006; 02:41 P.M. Elegant & typically pose with beautiful ballerina, and nice warm lighting come from bottom to feel as well as sunrise..., another impeccable capture, kelvin!!! Jim McConnell , November 01, 2006; 02:49 P.M. Great composition, the light is perfect! Julio Segura Carmona , November 04, 2006; 12:51 P.M. Suavidad de luz , color y gran belleza artistica, tonos, color, y gran encuadre, perfecta imagen Kelvin. David Orea , November 04, 2006; 09:06 P.M. Great ! Lovely scene, Kelvin. Catalin S. , November 12, 2006; 12:47 P.M. Elegant and delicate Dom N , November 12, 2006; 04:50 P.M. Alejandro Emilio Fernandez , November 13, 2006; 04:13 P.M. Poema de luz y fantasia, metafora en movimiento, caricia sedosa, una maravilla amigo mio. Pnina Evental This is classy

How a blind girl sees the world. (Animation) 這是由台灣藝術大學 多媒體動畫藝術學系 95ç´šçš„ä¸‰ä½ç•¢æ¥­ç”Ÿæ‰€è£½ä½œçš„ç•¢æ¥­çŸ­ç‰‡æ•…äº‹æ˜¯æ•˜è¿°ä¸€ä½å°å¥³å­©å› ç‚ºè¢«æ¶åŠ«è€Œé›¢é–‹åŽŸæœ¬ç†Ÿæ‚‰çš„é“è·¯ï¼Œåœ¨ç©¿éŽç±¬ç¬†å¾Œçš„æœªçŸ¥ä¸–ç•Œï¼Œé è‘—è¦–è¦ºä»¥å¤–çš„æ„Ÿå®˜å±•é–‹ä¸€å ´å¤§å†’éšªã€‚å…¨ç‰‡æŽ¡å–æ°´å½©ç¹ªè£½çš„èƒŒæ™¯èˆ‡æ‰‹ç¹ªå‹•ç•«æ­é…çš„è£½ä½œæ–¹å¼ï¼Œä»¥ç¹ªæœ¬å¼çš„ç”¨è‰²å’Œç°¡å–®çš„äººç‰©é€ åž‹å‘ˆç¾å°å¥³å­©æƒ³åƒä¸­çš„ä¸–ç•Œã€‚This is a graduation Production made by three students graduated from the National Taiwan University of Arts. The main character of little girl in the story confronts a robbery and strays from the road she is familiar with. After passing a hedge, she enters an unknown world and unfolds a magical adventure depending on senses other than vision and her imagination. Tags

Post-Apocalyptic Images of Japan The ruins and haikyo aficionado in me couldn’t resist making a post about Tokyo Genso‘s fabulous art depicting post-apocalyptic Japan. The illustrations have a breathtaking otherworldly quality that perfectly capture the sort of scenes I regularly come across while exploring ruins, albeit of course, on a much grander and majestic scale. Some of the scenes really aren’t stretching the truth that much either. Head into the backstreets of Japan and you’ll quickly find dilapidated old buildings and creeping plants reclaiming man-made structures for mother nature. Apply that to the iconic landmarks of central Tokyo and other areas of Japan, and you have some gorgeous concept art for what Tokyo could look like if man were wiped from the planet. Anyway, enough talk. Shinjuku Skyscapers Shibuya 109 Department Store Tokyo Big Sight Haneda Airport Rainbow Bridge Shibuya Sakuraya Hamamatsucho Station Shinjuku Station Osaka Streets Sofmap Akihabara Kabuki Theatre in Ginza Tokyo Skytree Tokyo Streets Ueno Hato Bus

Rainbows Login/Register Post View Rainbows mastermind 6/21/2012 129 5Share8 Share4 8 Recommended Thoughts Chronic Candy! Sparkle 12/26/2013 Red dragon OG Mario-Wajuana 9/6/2012 Its cool I'm just a panda... AntonioMontana 9/7/2012 so true! MamaMiaMVP 9/5/2012 Have you ever wondered what Snoop would look like if he was white? JonathanGoldsmith 9/24/2012 Flowers TiffanyWalker 9/19/2012 51842351074999Love sexsearchweedThought of the dayfunnySexygirlsstonerPopular ThoughtsSkid marksfriendstestingwhen you see itFallen angelsappreciationtravelbed is a carhotboobslifesnowhitesnowehitedogkushill beat a motherfucker with another motherfuckerSo if I cry I get boobiedSo u mean to tell meI looked at the camera Back to Top ©2012 www.higherthoughts.com ChronicCandy.com ChronicIce.com KushBoys.com Privacy Policy Terms of Service All rights reserved ShareThis Copy and Paste

Calvin and Hobbes - Stars and Infinity (Comic Strip) Karma Jello Cannabis, Psychedelics, Comedians, Astronomy, Philosophy, Photography, Art, MMA Karma Jello » Universe » Astronomy » Calvin and Hobbes – Stars and Infinity (Comic Strip) Calvin and Hobbes – Stars and Infinity (Comic Strip) POSTED BY CARLOS PIMENTEL | Astronomy, Philosophy Share on facebookShare on twitterShare on pinterest_shareShare on stumbleuponShare on google_plusone_shareShare on emailMore Sharing Services Calvin and Hobbes Look Out Into the Stars and Ponder Infinity. Calvin: If people sat outside and looked at the stars each night, I’ll bet they’d live a lot differently.Hobbes: How so? Tags: Awareness, Comic Strip, Infinity, Social Commentary Related Posts Today Week Month All Snowflakes on the Verge of Melting (Photo Gallery) The Beautiful World of Crop Circles (Photo Gallery) Psychedelic Astronomy Compilation, Adult Swim's Off The Air (Video) Neil deGrasse Tyson - Aliens Don't Respect Human Intelligence (Video) The Perils of Dairy (Video) karmajello.tumblr.com Back to Top Random Post

Inspirational quotes In From up North’s inspiration galleries we present the latest of our findings from the wonderful world of design. Amazing high quality artworks in various categories from great designers all over the globe. Personality gets the heart – Submitted by Vik West Stone Telling: The Magazine of Boundary-crossing Poetry by Shira Lipkin the girl's voice the changeling voice I have studied so hard to pass as one of you. I've spent a lifetime on it. I have tells. When I was little, I asked my alleged mother,what's a girl? She saidyou,you're a girl, and she laced me into dresses (that I tore off in the school parking lot, in line for the bus). My dancing was different. And everything is about containment is about being delicate and pretty laced into corsets whalebone stays digging into your ribs because it's not beauty if it doesn't hurt. But I studied. None of it is in my nature. I am something larger, more fluid, less constrained. Shira Lipkin is a writer, activist, mother, and nexus. Read Shira's discussion of this poem over at the Roundtable! If you enjoyed this poem, please consider donating a few dollars to help Stone Telling continue, and showcase many more fantastic and diverse voices! Photography:Untitled, by Graham Blackall.

Dear Photograph Dear “Dear Photograph”, Thank you for your beautiful blog and for inspiring me to make my own ‘Dear Photograph’ book for my parents as a gift this Christmas. In the process of taking over 400 pictures in the style of your blog, I visited the battered post-Hurricane Sandy New Jersey shoreline where I grew up. I visited preschools,bridges, churches, and grammar schools. I visited the homes and backyards of aunts, uncles, and grandparents. So Dear Photograph,Thank you for reminding us of who we were, who we are, and who we are going to be. Sincerely, Alyssa

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