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Monday, May 26, 2008

Cell Phone in a Microwave



Link
Scroll down for today's pictures & links.

Cell Phone in a Microwave

Extremely Dangerous. Do not attempt under any circumstances.



url

Today's pictures & links:
Click to enlarge images.

New Japanese ASCII Art fad

Beats good old ASCII art:



More on this page. Check out this one too (nsfw) - link

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Bejewelled Dragonfly
(click to enlarge)


(image credit: photosight.ru)


(image credit: Martin Amm)

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Balance

Here, try that -



See more incredible object balancing on this page.

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Crocodile learns a lesson


(original unknown)

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New word in auto trailers

A good use of the used car parts? -



Careful -



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Mixed fresh links for today:

14 Cameras that look like guns - [photo tech]
Cross-breeding between logos - [funny site]
Deus Ex: wearable motorcycle concept! - [wow tech]
World's Wildest Architecture - [slideshow]
Creative Bus Stops - [architecture]
Great Minimalist Photography - [photo site]
This guy can dance - [cool video]
What old people do for fun - [fun video] - via
All new for 1986! Mobile telephones! - [vintage video]

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Gypsy Castles in Romania

They live there by the whole gypsy family, so called "tabor" - these weird masterpieces are located in Cluj Napoca, Romania.
Photos by Dan Perry, AP:






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Wallpaper pattern changes with room temperature

Interesting idea?


(original unknown)

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More creative food boxes

An addition to our "Food Art" article. Would you think twice before eating "skull & bones" section?





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Risk Management



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I'd say the guy in the black van is pretty lucky:



You would need some luck in these situations, as well:





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Egg Dispenser

Oh no.


(original unknown, probably Worth1000)

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COMMENTS:

2 Comments:

Blogger Lamberto said...

Regarding the picture of the yellow truck in the motorway: it's definitely towed!
Just because it's a rear wheel drive vehicle it's easier to lift the rear wheels not to have the mechanical friction of the diff. (and if I'm not mistaken, at the back those trucks have 2 axles with a total of 8 tyres - because they are twin).
at last but not least, nobody is at the steering wheel.

___  
Blogger alvarhillo said...

It´s really dangerous to be in range. Ha ha ha.

___  

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  • I truly love the "why not" Japan Air Lines sketch!! Damn what a beautiful concept!
    Read more

  • I guess the problem was not the futurist design, but some technical difficulties, so none of these models was probably efficient enough to be mass-produced.
    Read more

  • >> Some of them beg the question "Why not?"

    I can explain why "his larger designs have not been built" (Wiki).

    Objects moving through an atmosphere will experience friction, which is costly to overcome. The cost depends on the shape of the object. For aeroplanes, shape is critical; a wrong shape will not fly.

    Mr. Colani ignores these facts, much as Creationists ignore evidence or lottery players ignore statistics. His creations are innovative because he takes an unusual approach; designing things that won't work.
    Read more

  • The second car in the car section makes me think of Batman's Batmobile.
    And the bike looks a bit like the one from the anime Akira (just a bit)
    Read more

  • yea, that is some pretty cool stuff for sure. i wish tastes weren't so conservative when it comes to vehicles, it would be neat to see some of this stuff on the road.
    Read more

  • "Mr. Colani ignores these facts"

    I'd be surprised if Colani merely ignored facts considering he studied aerospace engineering and once worked for McDonnell-Douglas. While I might be mistaken, I recall reading that he's also included in a patent covering inverted airfoil-shaped racing cars (thus improving high-speed traction/handling). He certainly doesn't follow conventional thinking, but then neither did the Wright brothers.

    I will agree with the "shape is critical" part. However, recent breakthroughs relating to drag on the fins of whales suggest that Colani could have gotten quite a bit wilder with his shapes. I'm relatively certain my aerospace professors would have categorically dismissed whale fin-inspired shapes; and they would have been wrong to do so. We'll have to see what comes of those developments (though we should see wind-turbines with "tubercles" from Whalepower Inc fairly soon).

    -

    I recall seeing all these designs while an industrial design student. Still inspiring.
    Read more

  • While his designs certainly look gorgeous, the guy himself is a total dick. I've seen him several times and he is one of the most unpleasant, arrogant people I've met.
    Read more

  • "I've seen him several times and he is one of the most unpleasant, arrogant people I've met."

    It may have been the same drive that allowed his achievement. Fine: be arrogant - but if you are - make something significant.

    This is impressive work.
    Read more

  • "impressive", yes.

    But if we all had the time and money to design aeroplanes that would never fly, or vehicles that would be would be pointlessly expensive to construct and run; then we could all produce "impressive designs".

    I don't wish to deny Mr. Colani the credit that is due to his vision and labors. Bit I wish to point out that it's unfair to other designers if we assume they have tried and failed to go where he goes. They must stay within the bounds of what is practical; he does not.

    Apples and oranges.
    Read more

  • But if we all had the time and money to design aeroplanes that would never fly, or vehicles that would be would be pointlessly expensive to construct and run; then we could all produce "impressive designs".

    I suspect there were people during the Renaissance who said the same thing about masterful paintings. "If I only had the time to grind my own pigment and had sponsors to fund my time, I could paint like the Masters." Yet here we are in an age when, in much of the West at least, materials and time are readily availabe, yet we have to relatively few painters of equal ability and stature.

    After receiving my aerospace degree, I later graduated from a well-regarded design school. Half of my graduating design class were unable to find employment as product designers. Of those that found work, most couldn't come close to what Colani has done.

    Consequently, comments such as "we could all produce 'impressive designs'" is effectively bullshit. And if you're the same David Byrden who said, "Before writing about something it’s advisable to understand it", then I'd suggest you take your own advice, because you don't seem to me to speak with any legitimate experience or expertise in this regard. If not, it's still good advice.

    -

    I don't wish to deny Mr. Colani the credit that is due to his vision and labors. Bit I wish to point out that it's unfair to other designers if we assume they have tried and failed to go where he goes. They must stay within the bounds of what is practical; he does not.

    I'm one of those for whom you claim to be concerned. I don't consider it unfair in the least. To suggest we need coddling because we've not achieved Colani's level of success is the worst form of paternalistic insult. Please don't suggest that I or my fellow designers are so petty or immature that we require handholding assurances. I didn't grow up in a generation where every participant received a medal no matter how poorly they performed; and I'm glad I didn't.

    The truth is, sometimes I get projects that are extremely constrained, and other times I'm given free range to pursue "Blue sky" concepts. That just goes with the territory. And considering some of Colani's practical successes, I'd venture his experience is not all that different.

    So please, take your concerns - if they're truly legitimate - elsewhere. I, for one, don't need you defending me. I'd rather be inspired.
    Read more

  • His craziness left big trace in the time.
    Great man.
    ID Summer Intensive'08
    Read more

  • >> To suggest we need coddling
    >> because we've not achieved
    >> Colani's level of success...

    I didn't say that. I spoke of the models in photos, not Mr. Colani's overall career, of which I know little.

    And if these specific designs won't work well, or at all, that's not "success"; that is time-wasting.

    Take the steam train. It has tilting wheels. They require larger, heavier bearings than vertical wheels. Is there any benefit to tilting the wheels? Apart from the obvious benefit (to Mr. Colani) of making the model look 'futurist'?

    Or take the aircraft. Working commercial aircraft are made tubular so that similar panels can be mass-produced and used throughout; but these craft are curvaceous and therefore expensive to implement. Why don't we see similar aircraft today (outside of the military)?

    One of the proposals "carries 2000 passengers". How many airports will rebuild their runways and other facilities to handle something with 3 times the capacity of an A380? Where's the cost-benefit analysis? Can this aircraft make money?

    Take the Japan Airlines design. It looks like a plant, rather than a bird. How innovative! we think. What a genius Colani must be! But will it fly safely? Will it cost a practical amount of money to build? Can it make a profit? I expect not; because it looks like a plant, rather than a bird.

    I don't know why these models were produced, nor whether they are supposed to represent practical designs. but that's what we are assuming in this website, and that's what I question.
    Read more

  • >>> it's unfair to other designers
    >>> if we assume they have tried
    >>> and failed to go where he goes

    >> To suggest we need coddling
    >> because we've not achieved
    >> Colani's level of success...

    I didn't say that.

    Which is why I used the word "suggest". I take it reading comprehension isn't your strong suit.

    -

    I spoke of the models in photos, not Mr. Colani's overall career, of which I know little.

    Based on your comments, this comes as no surprise to me. However, your point is moot. Being paid to do that kind of Blue Sky concept work - represented by those models - is essentially an indication of career success. The two go pretty much go hand-in-hand in this profession (i.e. most designers who aren't professionally successful usually get stuck only doing the kinds of conventional designs you're going on about. We don't study Industrial Design to be Engineers; as a group we usually study ID to do lots of fun things ... including conceptual exploration).

    -

    And if these specific designs won't work well, or at all, that's not "success"; that is time-wasting.

    As is posting your comments on this thread; especially when you confess to knowing essentially nothing of Colani's career yet feel free to weigh in on what he does and does not "ignore".

    Colani's getting paid for "time-wasting". Are you? Where are the articles and blog entries discussing your brilliant contributions? Please share.

    -

    Take the steam train. It has tilting wheels. They require larger, heavier bearings than vertical wheels. Is there any benefit to tilting the wheels? Apart from the obvious benefit (to Mr. Colani) of making the model look 'futurist'?

    I'd suggest learning how to pose appropriate, non-snarky questions. For example, rather than asking if there is "any benefit", you might instead ask, "Is there a non-obvious benefit to which convention, ignorance and bias are blinding us?" That's one important value of a Blue Sky exercise; it hopefully forces development teams to break with comfortable solutions and see problems with fresh, unadulterated eyes (even if they arrive at the same conclusion).

    In the case of his train, I'd ask you, "Which bearings?" This isn't an automobile with a centrally located drivetrain through which torque must be transfered. The train's driving wheels appear to be piston-driven off the front pods. From the image it appears that each reciprocating linkage originates from a front pod operating in the same plane as the tilt of the wheels. I suspect whatever non-planar motion that occurs is accounted for by a relatively simple bearing in the linkage (perhaps not shown in these particular images, since the first link is shown in a kind of top-dead-center position).

    As to advantage, I can imagine the vehicle's structure hanging off a central "spine" at the top of the vehicle, thus angled wheels potentially reduce the moment arm and improve force distribution. But without knowing engineering details, I'd hesitate to make the kinds of bold assertions with which you seem so comfortable.

    -

    Or take the aircraft. Working commercial aircraft are made tubular so that similar panels can be mass-produced and used throughout; but these craft are curvaceous and therefore expensive to implement. Why don't we see similar aircraft today (outside of the military)?

    Irrelevant and short-sighted.

    First off, manufacturing processes aren't static. Secondly, if Colani was asked by a client to ignore then-current manufacturing limitations, that's an issue you should take up with his client(s).

    Third, and most important, I'd suggest you do some research into "3D weaving" of the sort Issey Miyake is pioneering (link to Wired article).

    One of the limitations with composites used on aircraft is that builders have been limited to 2D sheets, which forces discontinuities. With 3D weaving we're almost certain to see more "organic" fuselages (like some military aircraft) whose shape is determined more by functional requirements than by manufacturing process limitations.

    Of course, how quickly such technology is adopted is dependent on how important entrenched manufacturing solutions are to the company since they represent investments which must be recovered. As with most technology, companies will attempt to extract as much use out of the old stuff before investing in the new. This business reality, however, has no bearing on this discussion. These are concepts of what might be possible; not what is most desirable for shareholders seeking short-term gains.

    Someone has to have vision.

    -

    One of the proposals "carries 2000 passengers". How many airports will rebuild their runways and other facilities to handle something with 3 times the capacity of an A380? Where's the cost-benefit analysis? Can this aircraft make money?

    Again, this isn't necessarily Colani's issue if clients are paying for his work. This is, imo, a business issue; and business realities change (e.g. the music industry).

    As to that 2000-seat aircraft, considering the arrangement of the windows, I can't really say how big the thing is. It looks massive, but that doesn't mean the footprint is massive.

    Also, Colani's designs seem to be pushing the "blended wing body" concept (not a new idea, but one which has been partly hampered by business politics rather than engineering impossibilities). Among the advantages of the BWB is its enormous payload. Not surprisingly, given the rise in fuel costs, I've just recently read, iirc, that the BWB project at Boeing may get more funding. Imagine that, Boeing is seriously considering a "curvaceous" aircraft (better give them a call, David, and tell them how stupid that idea is).

    Finally, just as important would be the aircraft's weight. However, I don't see a number anywhere, and so I can't compare it to the Airbus behemoth. Based on a) the image and b) the volumetric efficiency, and c) lifting body aerodynamics, I'm not so sure Colani's concept would weigh more than the Airbus. Its appearance is more massive but it's footprint seems smaller, so I can't say much on this count ... and I figure neither can you (though that reality doesn't seem to stop you).

    I can say this: in the mid-90's I did a fast, one-day Blue Sky concept for an arm-mounted computerized bar code scanner. My assumption: some day we wouldn't be limited by rigid circuit boards. The result, which the design firm decided to have modeled (link to image), wrapped around the arm organically ... as it should.

    Funny thing is, the very idea of flexible circuit boards is no longer a "dumb idea" like it was back then.

    -

    Take the Japan Airlines design. It looks like a plant, rather than a bird. How innovative! we think. What a genius Colani must be! But will it fly safely? Will it cost a practical amount of money to build? Can it make a profit? I expect not; because it looks like a plant, rather than a bird.

    You really should lose the personal bias. Are you an aerospace engineer? Are you aware the F-117 flew only because computers managed its control surfaces, or that forward-swept wings of the extreme sort shown in his concept have been successfully flight-tested? Are you an expert in morphable aero-surfaces (something I first saw demonstrated by the U.S. Air Force in 1984)? Are you an expert in rapid-manufacturing technology or advanced composites manufacturing? What do you know about bird bones? And do you know about people like Neri Oxman who are developing similarly organic designs using today's more advanced computational tools?

    "I expect not".

    What I do get is that you enjoy doing what you apparently advise against: Writing about stuff about which you have little understanding.

    I'm a degreed aero and a degreed industrial designer, yet I still try hard to qualify my comments on this thread because as Don Rumsfeld once famously pointed out, knowing what you don't know is important.

    -

    I don't know why these models were produced, nor whether they are supposed to represent practical designs. but that's what we are assuming in this website, and that's what I question.

    Perhaps you should re-read the copy that accompanies the images: "all from a never-never land of the most far-reaching imagination."

    Maybe your comprehension is okay; you just don't bother reading before opening your mouth and sticking your foot into it.
    Read more

  • colani makes beautiful shapes that resemble vehicles but these are not vehicles just beautiful shapes
    and while nice to look at are unpractical
    Read more

  • "I suspect there were people during the Renaissance who said the same thing about masterful paintings. "If I only had the time to grind my own pigment and had sponsors to fund my time, I could paint like the Masters." Yet here we are in an age when, in much of the West at least, materials and time are readily availabe, yet we have to relatively few painters of equal ability and stature."

    What are you babbling? Every sentence in this paragraph is so silly and wrong... Just discussing it is a waste of time: Renaissance art is somehow better than today's; materials and time are readily available (???) etc. Well let's just say that as far as skills go, there are so many fantastic artists around today - it's incredible. Since it's obvious you aren't well versed in art history, I suggest you check something introductory like the linesandcolors blog, open a National Geographic magazine, buy a Benetton shirt, watch a Disney movie and chances are you'll bump into at least one guy that is pure genius on par with Donatello.


    "Colani's getting paid for "time-wasting". Are you? Where are the articles and blog entries discussing your brilliant contributions? Please share."

    Or yours? Just out of curiosity, since you obviously have tons and tons of free time you're probably the richest guy on Earth.
    Read more

  • I think to begin to understand Colani you have to remember that he initially trained as a sculpter, so I think many of these concept designs should really be viewed as art rather than practical designs.

    However Colani has designed over 5000 real products as well, many can be viewed at:

    www.colani.org


    -
    Read more

  • I wholeheartedly agree with CSven.

    The biggest problem in commenting at all to this article is the fact that it is taken out of context, of the creation of any and all of these designs, and to the purpose and thought processes involved for their execution. Futurists do not have to conform to apprentice mindsets of "Not practical" "It'll never fly". Did you know that in the 1920s Luigi Colani was responsible for saving the company he was working for 1000s of francs by creating the platform high heel? Seems the problem was that the women's spiked heels were leaving holes in the flooring and his supervisor told him to find a new material. Instead... he creates a footware product of his own design, saves the company oodles of cash and gains notoriety, wealth and the attention of the ladies at the same time! Would YOU have thought OUTSIDE the plane? As outrageous these designs are... the limits of the imagination are placed on those who have limitation of mind. What can be conceived, can be created. Get out of your cubicle and your tight space thoughts and explore the world we live in. The EVIDENCE is in the creation of the creatures around us and the structures in nature that The Creator Himself designed.

    Yo Mr. Friction is costly...

    "To achieve the best aerodynamic design it is best to copy the hydrodynamic shapes of sea creatures" - Luigi Colani


    www.colani.org

    The products he has created are the evidence of his genius. You should be so blessed.
    Read more

  • CreationIsDesign - great story about spiked heels! Thank you.
    Read more

  • You are welcome!

    It is from an article in Omni Magazine from 1978-79.
    Read more

  • @rogermat

    "What are you babbling? Every sentence in this paragraph is so silly and wrong... Just discussing it is a waste of time: Renaissance art is somehow better than today's; materials and time are readily available (???) etc. Well let's just say that as far as skills go, there are so many fantastic artists around today - it's incredible. Since it's obvious you aren't well versed in art history, I suggest you check something introductory like the linesandcolors blog, open a National Geographic magazine, buy a Benetton shirt, watch a Disney movie and chances are you'll bump into at least one guy that is pure genius on par with Donatello."

    Where to start?

    First, I didn't say or even suggest that "Renaissance art is somehow better than today's". Re-read my comment with comprehension turned "on" next time.

    Second, yes, I'd argue that both materials and time are more readily available - "in much of the West at least" - than they were in the 1600's or earlier. Back then, at least according to my art school instructors, painters had to make their own paint. I tend to believe them since I doubt Winsor & Newton were around to deliver paint in convenient tubes. If you can provide evidence to the contrary, please do.

    For anyone unaware, to get an idea of what that involved, here's one tutorial - Link. What's missing is acquiring all the ingredients. I've little doubt that I could order all the materials I need online, have them shipped to me, and do this in a relatively quick fashion. For a painter living during the Renaissance, I think it's safe to say the effort would be more substantial.

    But wait! How many people actually make their own paint instead of buying it in little convenient tubes; paint which is subjected to modern tests to ensure the kinds of consistency never dreamed of 500 years ago?

    Don't strain yourself on that one. I rarely saw oil painters at CIA (a well-known fine art) school making their own pigments. I suspect, from my own experience, that the ceramicists were more likely to make their own slips and glazes than the painters were to make their own pigments (not surprising really since a painter friend of mine often complained that Realism wasn't as well-received as slapping a variety of materials - from newspapers to chunks of lumber - or found objects onto a canvas; and from what I saw he wasn't being dishonest).

    As to today's geniuses, that would probably include a former instructor, an amazing oil painter who, two years after I took his drawing class, was hired by Disney ... as an instructor to their artists.

    Thing is, I never said they were "better" or that we didn't have phenomenal talent today, I said: relatively few painters of equal ability and stature. Key word being "relatively".

    More telling, I find it interesting that you couldn't provide a name. And in today's world where the only time the public even thinks about painting is when a Rembrandt is sold at auction, I doubt one person in a thousand could name a brilliant painter working today.

    That would be the other part you didn't seem to catch: "and stature".

    -

    Or yours? Just out of curiosity, since you obviously have tons and tons of free time you're probably the richest guy on Earth.

    I'm happily self-employed, don't watch television, and don't have children. Thus I have plenty of free time, thanks for your "curiosity".

    As to "yours", I don't recall putting down Colani or taking cheap shots at someone who's accomplished quite a bit. Now I'm sure you're not simply being a troll (even though you're not being open about your identity). How about you identity yourself and we can discuss this on the phone? I'd be more than happy to debate these issues and tell you of my own modest successes (and hopes for future success) with someone whom I don't suspect is hiding behind internet anonymity.
    Read more

  • Csven, are you Mr. Colani himself?

    It is time for you to form you own opinions and answers, not repeating anything someone said or you read about Luigi, OK?

    =P

    Yours, sincerely, Lucas H.C.
    (Brazilian vehicles enthusiast, freetime 3D Modeler and I.D. student.)
    Read more

  • Oh come on you didn't say exactly

    "Renaissance > today"

    but it is implied there by mentioning the lack of artists with ability and stature. If you think it's not, let's not discuss it anymore and you can save your snappy stuff about my comprehension being turned off ... Ah but wait of course you didn't explicitly say it was turned off. Oh...

    Actually there were quite a lot of even more complex techniques back then than making oils that you could have used to support your theory; making them was pretty demanding - but manageable: don't forget that art during that time was basically a workshop-based process and taking the example of acquiring materials is taking things out of context, since you don't mention that there were established everyday studio practices (and people in charge) of dealing with similar tasks.

    Just to provide some background: the Renaissance painters that we usually think of when talking about the era were mostly not making the art all by themselves but were "heads of the studios with a final say in everything" (pretty much like Disney, the difference being Disney couldn't seriously paint or draw). Division of work and a path to becoming an artist (apprenticeship, experienced assistant, owner of a studio) were already very developed at the time and behind every produced piece there were teams of people that we'll probably never hear of. In some cases, some of them rose to fame themselves (post Vasari we get to know more names - Giulio Romano from Raffaello's workshop for example which is, I hasten to add before you start to question me, addmiteddly not "strict" Renaissance if such aq thing exists), while some of the most well known Renaissance paintings were not done by the artist whose name they bear: most famous examples are probably the (supposedly) Leonardo's early work or the last Raffaello's. There were some famous artists that were making most of the stuff themselves but it is a really small minority and in some cases not very successfull (Leonardo's Last Supper). Same goes for brushes, preparing the canvases, walls etc - certain artists were more involved in some aspects of the production chain than others but to say that painters were preparing their own paint is misleading. Generally there were no painters in the same sense as today's painters but the label stuck for some historical reasons.

    Back to W&N, I'd argue that they're as available to us as chalk was in Renaissance. Remember that the target audience of art was, ultimately, today's audience of blockbuster movies (who comissioned and collected the art is another story) - today's audience reaction is probably similar to a painting as the old audience's would be to a chalk sketch.

    While it is true that the situation with anonimity was similar in other parts of history (we know of Alexander but rarely talk about his generals or let alone cooks) the situation in art is different because, for example, the impressionist really could do the whole apinting themselves so I'm not trying to find a cheap way out by relativizing everything, but rather show how the nature and role of art disciplines has changed considerably and so much that measuring "availability" as "can I buy a tube in the shop" doesn't work. The situation becomes even more shaky for your arguments if you try to apply the same principle in sculpture etc. Is marble more available too for example?

    One can argue that Photoshop and digital painting are making it really more accessible, but ultimately it's the same story.

    On a somewhat related note I wonder whether housing is less of a problem now than it was in Renaissance since we have more buildings around and building stuff is easier supposedly - I honestly have no idea, it'd be interesting to find out. We can dismiss this as anecdotal, but I see lots of homeless people in the area where my office is (and it's supposed to be one of the richest areas in USA).

    To talk about stature here is a bit impractical for me, involves also my personal frustration with artists (most of which are half literate morons or in best case scenario fach idiots - there are exceptions of course), position of the art today (no wonder people think of by-time-filtered Renaissance art as better when compared to disposable / throwaway flicks on the one side or paintings of apples on the other) and probably most importantly who defines the stature. It's true 1/1000 people couldn't name a brilliant contemporary painter - people could probably name dead guys like Picasso or Van Gogh though.


    More telling, I find it interesting that you couldn't provide a name. And in today's world where the only time the public even thinks about painting is when a Rembrandt is sold at auction, I doubt one person in a thousand could name a brilliant painter working today.

    One of the reasons I didn't provide any names is that I am not really comfortable with the situation in contemporary painting (the painters I know are currently in love with Singer Sargent, come on) and it's all very very disputable - but to dish out some names, I personally think artists like Cai Guo-Qiang (his page is so big I think it's better to link to just one work) or Oliviero Toscani can easily be put up there with anyone else: technically they're extremely accomplished, their attitude is strong and articulate, and both are very contemporary and universal at the same time.

    There are more painters that I'd be inclined to think have both ability and stature: Zhang Qikai (starngely absent from internet); or Guan Zeju, maybe? His propaganda posters are incredible - personally I'm not that much in love with some of his stuff but one can not deny he's good. He's not that present on internet, but there's a blog with some info here if anybody's interested.

    I guess your friend was living in cubism, since slapping stuff together is not that present on the market for the last ooh a few decades. Realism is in fact quite well perceived - I guess your friend just didn't find his target audience.


    I'm happily self-employed, don't watch television, and don't have children. Thus I have plenty of free time, thanks for your "curiosity".

    Interestingly, I have the same situation here on all accounts but still have almost no free time. My "curiosity" is actually something I should apologize for, being petty and confronational is not nice.


    As to "yours", I don't recall putting down Colani or taking cheap shots at someone who's accomplished quite a bit. Now I'm sure you're not simply being a troll (even though you're not being open about your identity). How about you identity yourself and we can discuss this on the phone? I'd be more than happy to debate these issues and tell you of my own modest successes (and hopes for future success) with someone whom I don't suspect is hiding behind internet anonymity.

    I'm not hiding behind anonimity, it's just that I don't really think much of identities especially on public forums (not that native English speakers can pronounce my name anyway) - to illustrate how much I think of it and whether I walk the talk, let me just say that I don't even have a page / blog / portfoilo (this is unthinkable, unthinkable in my business) and am usually not even signed in credits of the projects I work on. The only project where my real name appeared was in a Disney project I worked a few months ago.

    Sorry for such a long post, but I didn't have the time to optimize it. The options were to write either something off the top of my head or not replying in the foreseeable future (I'll be absent for quite some time) so I just thought it's less impolite if I at least try.
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  • @Lucas H.C.

    Interesting that you seem comfortable offering your opinions on how I form my "own opinions and answers", and your assumptions regarding whether I am "repeating anything someone said or you read about Luigi". Have you read a book about me? Are you repeating what someone else has said about me? Please share.

    By the way, here's an opportunity for you to show how brilliant you are in comparison to Colani, for whom you obviously feel some disdain: post a link to your ID/3D modeling portfolio. Don't be shy now.

    -

    @RogerMat

    Wow. Could you now be further from the topic at hand? By your own admission I'm apparently able to more efficiently use my time than you are, but even I have my limits. Thus I'll briefly clarify/correct a couple of points.

    "it is implied there by mentioning the lack of artists with ability and stature. If you think it's not, let's not discuss it anymore ... It's true 1/1000 people couldn't name a brilliant contemporary painter - people could probably name dead guys like Picasso or Van Gogh though."

    No, it isn't implied.

    You once again miss the word "relatively" in context to the sheer numbers, the growth of new artistic disciplines/outlets, the increased number of hobbyists who either sell themselves as serious artists or who are simply regarded by others as serious artists, and the general public's level of relative (dis)interest given these other diversions (in addition to my further qualifying the comment with, "in much of the West at least"). You thus shift the context into a meaningless discussion over whether today's truly serious and gifted artists are equally skilled, something with which I wouldn't disagree. In fact, I'd legitimately expect we have more Renaissance-caliber artists today than back then. Again, sheer numbers.

    All of which you seem to miss, which is curious since your "frustration" is a product of the very point I'm making.

    Be that as it may, since you're apparently unable to bridge that disconnect (perhaps merely through misinterpreting my comment) and don't seem to see the error I perceive in your related anecdotal argument, I'll consider that off-topic discussion over. Feel free to continue, but I'm happy to disagree and move on.

    "I guess your friend was living in cubism, since slapping stuff together is not that present on the market for the last ooh a few decades. Realism is in fact quite well perceived - I guess your friend just didn't find his target audience."

    I'm unsure how you misunderstood my earlier words: "a painter friend of mine often complained that Realism wasn't as well-received as slapping a variety of materials - from newspapers to chunks of lumber - or found objects onto a canvas". Hopefully you now realize that he was not "living in cubism", because he'd obviously have no cause to complain, would he? In case you're still confused: No. He was a frustrated(!) Realist painter.
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  • I am involved in Flying Car research for quite sometime. To be unorthodox in thinking is my only way as anything related to car & lifting it is limiting from every angle. I have gone through this & still going through it. Hence, I find his works very creative with no self-limiting pre-conceived notions at all.

    I also read all of the comments. I just want to quote this: "People who think they have all the answers are effectively prisoners of their own vanity." - Jonathan Cainer
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  • About Agassiz statue - it is not urban art - it's a real statue after earthquake.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Agassiz
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Agassiz_in_the_Concrete.jpg
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  • About the photo that shows two smashed car, this is the Marriot Hotel at Antofagasta, chile.
    Last year an earthquake produce this... and a lot more.
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  • I think the apple thing is a bird-bath...
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  • the atm picture is a fake, look at the shadows on the atm, they are wrong...
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  • at least 2 photos are from poland: the one with the bicycle road (very famous photo in category: what polish engineers can do for bicycles), and the one with no railways for tram (the bus on the photo seems to be from warsaw).
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  • @maciek - it isn't warsaw, it's łódź, probably zachodnia street. there's a major renovation of the tracks and the lamp (or whatever it is) will be removed. but nevertheless, funny as hell :D
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  • it isnt lodz, it is gorzow wlkp ;D my city :D
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  • that's what happens to cranes when they are lifting a very heavy load and the cable snaps...
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  • no no it łódż zachodnia street :)) pozdro PL :)
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  • Lots of pics are from Russia :)
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  • first picture is form egypt!!
    3mar ya masr :)
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  • В росии самый креативный народ :)))
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  • это точно!!! очень подборка понравилась!
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  • LoL Great and very funny...:)

    pozdro pl
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  • The BMW- pics are from Trondheim, Norway..
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  • The house with no basement or foundation is a historical house that is being moved.
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  • Photo no4. is also from Poland - Wroclaw, apartment building... contemporary polish architecture :(
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  • I have a hammer just like the one in the pic, it's awesome. It is the only purpose built bottle opener that guarantees and open bottle, it opens ANY bottle, the question is really how much liquid remains....
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  • The space ship on that Russian space movie is just a little too Phallic.
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  • Allright, I give up... What is that mystery device?!?
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  • Mystery device: my bet is it's a giant kaleidoscope from the trippy hippy 1960's.
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  • Those motorbikes are awesome. The Yamaha is a bit much, but the Suzuki G-Stryder is gorgeous. It's a pity that the more extreme looks you see in automobile concept pieces are so rarely passed on to the consumer market.

    That Monotracer pod thing seems to have two secret extra wheels - you can see one of them in the picture above, mostly covered by a panel, just in front of the back wheel. You can see them extended a bit here: http://preview.tinyurl.com/6bxnjt on a different version.
    Can't work out quite what the point of them is, though, unless it's to let you take EXTREMELY radical corners... Although then surely you'd have to get out to tip the bike upright again afterward...
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  • Ok, I have become entranced with the song, and must know where I can find a copy of it, short of replaying the YouTube video over and over..Help, oh internet!
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  • Rowan - try this link. It should have all the songs from this movie in mp3.
    Enjoy!
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  • I think the small wheels on the Monotracer are for low speed and parking. The Ecomobile has the same concept. This video shows it in action:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbdkZB9-Sd4&feature=related
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  • Avi Abrams, wow! Great to have those links although for some strange reason I can ony save as quicktime movie files. Any idea how I save as mp3s so I can play on my i-tunes?
    Much appreciated
    D x
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  • интересно чем закончился эксперимент с крыльми на параутисте
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  • Do you have a source link for the Paper LP? It looks like a marvellous idea...
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  • Ahem... "Although the glass does not currently get hot enough to toast bread, the vendor explained with some R&D this application may be possible"
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  • The Swiss Army knife is not a real marketed product. I believe that's just an ad piece.
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  • Knife's real:
    http://www.wengerna.com/browse/product.jsp?prod_id=1260&cat_id=1&cat_name=Knives%E2%8A%82_cat_id=23
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  • Related to the plagues, here are plus microbes and viruses.
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  • You can also find this Knife here
    http://www.gadgetshop.com/Gadgets/OutdoorGadgets/OutdoorSurvival/PRDOVR~291773/Wenger+Giant+Swiss+Army+Knife.jsp
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  • Thanks for all the info! No info on Paper LP though.
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  • http://www.simonelvins.com/paper_record.html

    It appears that it was a one-time project, and there are no intructions for it.

    Very, very interesting though.
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  • The Device is infinitely useful. I AM buying one!
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  • A few items are probably NSFW...a warning would be nice.
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  • The bag of plagues seems a bit racist. I don't remember Black People being one of the biblical plagues...
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  • haha awesome

    oh, "national electronics" is actually Panasonic, but their home appliances line in Japan.
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  • I'm a straight girl and I'm itching to get a hold of those boob stress balls. Great idea!
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  • Anonymous said... "The bag of plagues seems a bit racist. I don't remember Black People being one of the biblical plagues..."

    I went on to the link about the "plush plagues" and it turns out that the black man represents the plague of illness (he has a boil on his face).
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  • Found a link for the Paper LP, I see. Excellent.
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  • The photo with the water ballon is the greatest.
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  • The picture with the snowboard was taken during the 'Quicksilver Showdown over the city' in Vancouver (Canada). Original can be found here : http://www.showdownoverthecity.ca/gallery.html#
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  • Hmmm...those earthquake photos look rather suspicious.
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  • That furry fthing is a tribble! :-)
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  • Real fish slapping is done like this...
    www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsfiD78Cy0s
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  • That first folding table is amazing - the engineering that must have gone into that thing!
    The second one, however, looks wrong on so many levels.
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  • Russian policemen on the bike is taken from the photoshop contest performed at the http://fake.dirty.ru/veloment/
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  • Obviously you were joking by posting the 2 posts with kid's comments. You weren't, right?
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  • The picture with the crabs looks like the work of Corey Arnold.

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  • Absolutely freaking beautiful photos! Thank you!
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  • I grew up outside of Newport, OR and your pictures are somehow even better than my memories.
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  • I drive the gorge all the time, and I have never gotten tired of the scenery. Great write up here.
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  • correct me if im wrong but this is PRODUCT PLCEMENT. pictures asr simply spoiled by JEEP
    shame
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  • Mar - nope. This is simply the car I drive. I happen to like how it looks :)
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  • The pictures are awesome, beautiful, but maybe the title is a little bit deceitful.
    Two roads in oregon for part one, can I conclude there will be a LOOOOOOOOT of parts with the same title :P ?
    I will stay connected - Thanks
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  • Ruben - this title is to kick off the series. Hopefully a long one.
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  • Just a small edit: it's "The Dalles," not just "Dalles." I think it's silly too, but that's how it is.
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  • In addition to the driveable parts of the Columbia River Highway, it's well worth checking out the Mosier Twin Tunnels just East of Hood River. This is a closed section of the road that was recently repaved and opened for walking and biking and it's spectacular.
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  • I drove up to Oregon a few years back, and the roads had so many twists and turns that by the end of the trip I was muttering things like, "They couldn't have just blown a hole through that freaking mountain?!"

    Very pretty, though.
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  • Glad you enjoyed the drives and scenery! It's a prime reason DW and I moved back from Texas (aside from family and the extreme dislike of hot/humid weather). Great pics!
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  • I lived for a year in Portland, and often drove through the gorge just to appreciate its great beauty. There is an old road and a new road, and I highly recommend the "old" road for its great beauty and lack of traffic. I always thought it was a shame that Mark Twain wasn't born there instead of Missouri. Another beautiful spot on the Oregon coast is Cape Foulweather near Depoe Bay. Named by Capt James Cook, it is the highest point on the coast and you can watch the whale migration easily from there.
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  • In 2006 I got to visit a lovely little place called Langlois along 101. From there I climbed Cape Blanco light.

    I wish I could live in OR. Enough of TX heat!
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  • Have you thought about posting roads form maybe the southern hemisphere or even europe. i mean they are beautiful photos but there are more roads than ones in America, Im from New Zealand and we have some stunning roads here, and i know that the UK does to. I suggest a title change.
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  • All other countries and locations will come in the next part of the series. This is only the first part. Stay tuned.
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  • Nada que envidiar a mi tierra.. Chile tiene parajes bastante similares a los mostrados en las fotos... salu2
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  • Have Jeep and ready to go!
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  • most beautiful roads in America maybe?

    There are way more beautiful roads in the rest of the world
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  • I've actually walked under the cliff overhang of Latourell Falls. The falls are even cooler when you're between them and the cliff.
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  • These are like images taken in paradise. Very very interesting and fun to travel through... I'd love to have a visit there:)

    I just imagine if it was possible to ride a limo on these roads (I'm sure that's not that easy, but...) what the excitement level would be:)
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  • you know, this series would make an awesome series of books: www.blurb.com
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  • oregon have nothing on norway, every road in sunmörsalpene blows that road out of the water
    Read more

  • I don't get the negative comments , if you don't have something positive to say , keep them to yourself . These are beautifull pics of a beautifull state and some of us appreciate it.
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  • These may be the most beautiful roads in Oregon, or perhaps the USA, but they are merely "pretty" compared to truly spectacular stretches of tarmac like the Stelvio Pass in Italy or the magnificent A82 through Glencoe in Scotland.
    Read more

  • Bernard Curry - I agree, Europe certainly has roads that trump these... This summer I took a sports car across the Alps, stay tuned for updates.
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  • Hi There,

    My name is Kelvin, Watson and I work for www.freeonlinegames.com I came across your website and I am very impressed, Moreover, I was wondering if you can add our link on your website. We are one the top 10 free gaming website out there. We offer free embeddable games and I guarantee you that visitors on your website will appreciate seeing our link on your website. We thank you, for your consideration.

    If you do decide to add our link, please add the following description if you like

    Play free games online. Thousands of games to choose from. Racing games, shooting games, flying games, puzzle games, RPG games and many more!

    If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to contact me at cs@freeonlinegames.com


    Kind Regards,

    Kelvin Watson

    FreeOnlineGames.com
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  • The picture of the child soldier with butterfly wings and an AK-47 is surely one of the saddest things I've seen lately.

    Oh, and aren't the squid pacifiers actually meant to be jellyfish pacifiers?
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  • Great collection as always

    The Victorian section looks more 1930's and 40's to me.

    and the AK-47 shot with the wings, those aren't toys.
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  • He meant the wings :P
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  • To me these wings are photoshoped. Considering those kids are in armed conflict area I doubt they would wear such flashy toys on their backs.
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  • The wings are probably real. The National Patriotic Front of Liberia was infamous for child soldiers who wore womens' wigs, dresses, etc. in combat in the belief that it confused their enemies' bullets.
    Read more

  • Some of the kids in the article appear in the armed dispute so I hesitate that they would wear such
    flashy wings on their back-side...
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  • Very thoughtful, touching, and some of them downright hilarious.

    great post

    :)
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  • The aliens face hugger isn't a pacifier, it's a plushie (comes with it's cocoon too, that's the grey thing in the background), I saw them for sale somewhere but I can't remember where.
    Read more

  • The bambi piece is from Ben Frost's "Kmart After Dark" I believe.

    I think it's awesome. <<
    Read more

  • Does anyone know the story behind the photo with the two policemen in the foreground (one of whom is holding a billy-club) facing a child?
    Read more

  • Your "tank accident" isn't an an accident.. It's the only way to change the tracks on a tank.. One of the links gets unbolted, the tank drives off, a new track gets laid in place and the tank drives on it again.

    How else would you replace a +2 tons "wheel" ?
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  • Actually, It looks like it is an accident, as the tank doesn't appear to have a new track on. Normally to change a track, the old track is unpinned at the front, the new track pinned to it, the tank driven forward until it is on the new track, and the old one is removed. This looks like one of the track pins has snapped while the tank was moving, and it's coasted several meters.
    Read more

  • Marilyn Monroe has so much personality - she still almost leaps at you from that old photo.

    No star of today can match her aura
    Read more

  • I recommand people from other country then U.S. to NOT read "The Essential Man's Library". You could be a little bit insulted to find out that more then 50% of the book come from U.S.
    Read more

  • Your "old Russian art" looks a rather modern Baltic thing, something from Estonia, Lithuania or Latvia. The theme is still a mystery, though.

    I identify the "Chtulhu harvest" as the Buddha's Hand citrus. That's the shape it typically is. The fruit is used symbolically in Chinese art.
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  • Considering the "Russian Art":
    I don't know what the guy with the ring on the anvil is doing, but the woman seems to hold a pair of scissors..
    the theme is "trades" it seems.

    The Library could be seen as insulting, however the author of that list has some bias to T.Roosevelt and Dostoevsky - it is easy to replace many of the books with equivalent ones of other authors/countries and languages. These lists are always quite arbitrary and say much about their authors' taste.
    Read more

  • I thought she had a willy!
    Read more

  • I don't usually like YouTube edit-jobs, but that Red Army Ensemble/Run-DMC confab was great.

    Also, agreed with the earlier poster; Marilyn Monroe was really a remarkable person.

    That "Visionary Artist" thing was a bit painful, though, wasn't it?
    Read more

  • You Got Served: 1940's Soviet Edition
    Read more


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