Reblogged from ...shit...
fluuf:

ddagz:

oh god. my ideal dog. husky. two different colored eyes. this really just popped up on my dash.

same^

fluuf:

ddagz:

oh god. my ideal dog. husky. two different colored eyes. this really just popped up on my dash.

same^

Reblogged from ...shit...
nzafro:

The human eye magnified.

nzafro:

The human eye magnified.

Reblogged from NZAfro
today’s essentials

today’s essentials

Reblogged from Inspiring stuff
yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

Van Gogh’s Self Portrait - Korean artist Joo Jaebum has rendered classic artworks square by square to create a series of pixelated art. 
More artworks

yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

Van Gogh’s Self Portrait - Korean artist Joo Jaebum has rendered classic artworks square by square to create a series of pixelated art. 

More artworks

Reblogged from Inspiring stuff
Liz as Cleo!

Liz as Cleo!

Reblogged from ☺ teenagebum281 ☺
I see you

I see you

Reblogged from ...shit...
Tags: lobo
yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

Randy Mora - La Pitonisa (2010)

yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

Randy Mora - La Pitonisa (2010)

Reblogged from Inspiring stuff
yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

 
Art of the Toilet Paper Roll by JUNIOR FRITZ JACQUET
French artist Junior Fritz Jacquet has been fascinated by paper since a very young age. Among various other paper and cardboard creations, he transforms plain toilet paper rolls into remarkable miniature masks. His technique is inspired by origami, in that it uses a single piece and folds it into a shape, but has a unique smoothness that deviates from the sharpness and jagged edges of origami, creating shapes that are astonishingly human. The masks are sculpted by hand, then coated with shellac and different pigments. A testament to the power of taking something incredibly simple and transforming it into something impressively expressive, each piece exudes a complexity of human emotion conveyed in just a few brilliantly orchestrated folds.

yellowandotherinspiringstuff:

Art of the Toilet Paper Roll by JUNIOR FRITZ JACQUET

French artist Junior Fritz Jacquet has been fascinated by paper since a very young age. Among various other paper and cardboard creations, he transforms plain toilet paper rolls into remarkable miniature masks. His technique is inspired by origami, in that it uses a single piece and folds it into a shape, but has a unique smoothness that deviates from the sharpness and jagged edges of origami, creating shapes that are astonishingly human. The masks are sculpted by hand, then coated with shellac and different pigments. A testament to the power of taking something incredibly simple and transforming it into something impressively expressive, each piece exudes a complexity of human emotion conveyed in just a few brilliantly orchestrated folds.

Reblogged from Inspiring stuff