Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Georges-Pierre Seurat is often used to illustrate pointilism, the art style that became the precurser of dot-matrix printing. The painting has inspired many adaptations, parodies, and unusual uses for the artwork. Frogsmoke has collected many of these in one post. This picture shows the masterpiece used for a tattoo! http://frogsmoke.com/seurats-sunday-afternoon/ -via Grow-A-Brain
Miss Cellania's Blog Posts
Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte by Georges-Pierre Seurat is often used to illustrate pointilism, the art style that became the precurser of dot-matrix printing. The painting has inspired many adaptations, parodies, and unusual uses for the artwork. Frogsmoke has collected many of these in one post. This picture shows the masterpiece used for a tattoo! http://frogsmoke.com/seurats-sunday-afternoon/ -via Grow-A-Brain
I posted this on Sunday, then pulled it when JP lost his website completely due to excessive bandwidth issues. But he has a new site up!
This is how your cat sees the world. JP attached a camera to Mr. Lee’s collar and recorded his adventures. Link -original story via Cynical-C -updated link via Boing Boing
This house is not to be built, it’s to be grown! Architects Mitchell Joachim and Javier Arbona and environmental engineer Lara Greden designed this “tree house†to be both eco-friendly and alive. Trees are planted and trained to grow in the shape of the finished home. The interior walls are made of clay and plaster, and will look like a normal house. http://www.popsci.com/popsci/whatsnew/0cb1ec816bc3e010vgnvcm1000004eecbccdrcrd.html -via Look at This
Vincent Laforet took a series of sports photographs and used the tilt-shift effect to make them more natural and accessible. In this New York Times slideshow, he explains why. Slideshow opens in autoplay mode. Link -via Metafilter
In this video post, ocularist Kim Erickson describes his job of making artificial eyes. It’s a a fascinating occupation you never think of, but those who have responded to this post say he’s the best. http://spokesmanreview.com/blogs/video/play.asp?file=052907_eyes_sr&filetype=swf -via Metafilter
It was on June 5, 1977 that the Apple II, the world's first "practical" personal computer, went on sale.
A few years later I upgraded from a TRS-80 to a second-hand Apple II. I was amazed at the ease of a computer that you didn’t have to program yourself! Link
Featuring an integrated keyboard, built-in BASIC programming languages, expandable memory, a monitor capable of color graphics, a sound card and expansion slots, the Apple II resembles today's modern desktops in the way a '38 Plymouth resembles a Cadillac Escalade. Cruder, perhaps, with fewer bells and whistles, but a smoothly functioning machine nevertheless.
A few years later I upgraded from a TRS-80 to a second-hand Apple II. I was amazed at the ease of a computer that you didn’t have to program yourself! Link
A woman in Leatherhead, England took a hedgehog to the vet because it was so big it couldn't move. The animal was suffering from "ballooning", a condition in which air escapes from the lungs and is trapped under the skin. Vets inserted a tube into the hedgehog to release the air, essentially deflating him. Link -via Arbroath
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