The Eye of Love, René Groebli
(Source: alfsaga, via ledelinquant)
The Eye of Love, René Groebli
(Source: alfsaga, via ledelinquant)
Of course I am!!!!!! and it works fantastic!
The five photographs taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths from 1917-1920 in the village of Cottingley, Yorkshire, England. In 1983 the two cousins admitted that the pictures were faked using paper cutouts; Frances, however, insisted that that the final photograph, showing a group of faeries gathering in the grass, was genuine. The girls also maintained that, although the photographs might be hoaxed, they still witnessed faeries dancing at the bottom of their garden. The pictures still continue to mystify and enchant people even today.
(via wednesdaysnecropolis)
Extraordinary photos of young hitchhikers and freight train hoppers by Mike Brodie
Mike Brodie(tumblr | facebook) first began photographing in 2004 when he was given a Polaroid camera. Working under the moniker, The Polaroid Kidd, Brodie spent the next four years circumambulating the U.S. amassing an archive of photographs that would go on to make up one of the few, true collections of American travel photography. Having never undergone any formal training, he chose to remained untethered to the pressures and expectations of the art market
(via soucii)
Paintings by Deidre But-Husaim:
(via dontletmommasee)
(Source: grape-frogg.com, via lutrea)
(via dontletmommasee)
Panavision and Technicolor cameras -
So much movie history right there! It’s funny because the technicolor cams actually have an fps gauge on the side, a very large dial with a needle that points to the frames per second. Insane.
(via tiredandtrueofheart)
Time rushes by, love rushes by, life rushes by, but the Red Shoes go on.
(via larsvontrier)