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AnnieTUFFlikesSTUFF

A tumblr so I can reblog all the neato stuff I find on the interweb.
Waste time with me.
You can find my own stuff HERE annieTUFF tumblr

THE FABULOUS ORIGINALS- It Ain’t Fair But It’s Fun (by therotatingchinmen)

Aw yeah.  

archiemcphee:

José Suris IV is a Brooklyn-based artist and “a 3D illustrator who loves cats.” José creates awesome sculptures and masks using paper, styrofoam, wireform, and paperclay. His creations are beautiful, playful, and incredibly detailed. We wish we could go out into the woods to play with them too.

“Through layers of paper and shades of color, Suris produces extremely detailed shapes with incredible texture that gives each form a lifelike presence. The wide range of final products includes some pieces that are fully sculpted creatures, others that are simple masks, and still others that are bodiless heads which Suris mounts and hangs on display just like a taxidermist might. For Suris, it seems that anything and everything sparks the creative process, including internet videos, cartoons, The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Pokémon’s Eevee, friends’ plays, and stories that the artist hears in everyday life.”

Visit José Suris’ website to view more of his wonderful artwork.

[via My Modern Metropolis]

tammytrasho:

So cool

suicidewatch:

The Vaselines

(via beach--bummed)

photographsonthebrain:


“The printing was intentional to serve the subject of the book, it is a single silvery detailed 300 dpi impression on fine paper. I wanted it to look anemic; the opposite of Ansel Adams. In the end the book degenerates into pictures of pieces of paper. The book was reviewed in Afterimage; the magazine of the Visual Studies Workshop. The art critic Robert C. Morgan, one of my film projectionist clients, told me he thought it was “post-conceptual.”

(via Addison Thompson’s Desk Copy 1984 | Hatje Cantz | fotoblog)

photographsonthebrain:

“The printing was intentional to serve the subject of the book, it is a single silvery detailed 300 dpi impression on fine paper. I wanted it to look anemic; the opposite of Ansel Adams. In the end the book degenerates into pictures of pieces of paper. The book was reviewed in Afterimage; the magazine of the Visual Studies Workshop. The art critic Robert C. Morgan, one of my film projectionist clients, told me he thought it was “post-conceptual.”

(via Addison Thompson’s Desk Copy 1984 | Hatje Cantz | fotoblog)

photojojo:

Happy Birthday, Edwin Land!
You invented the Polaroid, inspired innovators like Steve Jobs, and made real life magic happen.
Photo via LIFE

photojojo:

Happy Birthday, Edwin Land!

You invented the Polaroid, inspired innovators like Steve Jobs, and made real life magic happen.

Photo via LIFE