bone/yard
I dig things up, and bury them here.
/3 months ago
/826 notes

theworldwelivein:

Golden Staircase (by Dunny)

theworldwelivein:

Golden Staircase (by Dunny)

/3 months ago
/125 notes

/4 months ago
/476 notes

theworldwelivein:

white frosted (by stephan_amm)

theworldwelivein:

white frosted (by stephan_amm)

/4 months ago
/914 notes

theworldwelivein:

BY: Vladimir Donkov (via Arctic Landscapes on Photography Served)

theworldwelivein:

BY: Vladimir Donkov (via Arctic Landscapes on Photography Served)

/4 months ago
/351 notes

life:

Over the past three years, the staff at LIFE.com has pored over tens of thousands of extraordinary LIFE pictures — including some of the most celebrated photographs ever made.
Here, in an exercise that proved thrilling, humbling, satisfying, and exasperating all at once, each staffer selected five all-time favorites. Could we have expanded the list to 10, or 20, or 50 favorites? In a heartbeat. But for now, these will have to suffice. 

This photo created a bit of a debate in the LIFE.com offices when it came up recently. The majority of the office decided that this monkey looked like it was ‘up to no good.’ I, however, am convinced that it’s meditating on the great answered questions of the cosmos. In reality, of course, it’s probably just sitting in a warm cloud of its own pee.” — Michael Y. Park

life:

Over the past three years, the staff at LIFE.com has pored over tens of thousands of extraordinary LIFE pictures — including some of the most celebrated photographs ever made.

Here, in an exercise that proved thrilling, humbling, satisfying, and exasperating all at once, each staffer selected five all-time favorites. Could we have expanded the list to 10, or 20, or 50 favorites? In a heartbeat. But for now, these will have to suffice. 

This photo created a bit of a debate in the LIFE.com offices when it came up recently. The majority of the office decided that this monkey looked like it was ‘up to no good.’ I, however, am convinced that it’s meditating on the great answered questions of the cosmos. In reality, of course, it’s probably just sitting in a warm cloud of its own pee.” — Michael Y. Park

/4 months ago
/1,105 notes

theworldwelivein:

Alberta, Canada© BKBouwsema

theworldwelivein:

Alberta, Canada
© BKBouwsema

/4 months ago
/212 notes

kittydoom:

“Multiple Personalities” by dihaze

kittydoom:

“Multiple Personalities” by dihaze

/4 months ago
/316 notes

(Source: collectionofartreferences)

/5 months ago
/717 notes

life:

Talk about fun in the sun…
Four models show off bathing suit fashions on a Florida beach during the summer of 1950.
(see more exclusive photos here)

life:

Talk about fun in the sun…

Four models show off bathing suit fashions on a Florida beach during the summer of 1950.

(see more exclusive photos here)

/5 months ago
/2,526 notes

life:

When Albert Einstein died on April 18, 1955, his funeral and cremation were intensely private affairs, and only one photographer managed to capture the events of that extraordinary day: LIFE magazine’s Ralph Morse.

“I grabbed my cameras and drove the 90 miles to Princeton from my home in northern New Jersey. Einstein died at the Princeton Hospital, so I headed there first. But it was chaos — so many journalists, photographers, onlookers milling around outside what, back then, was a really small hospital. ‘Forget this,’ I said, and headed over to the building where Einstein’s office was.”

Above: Ralph Morse’s photograph of Einstein’s office in Princeton, taken hours after Einstein’s death and captured exactly as the Nobel Prize-winner left it.
(see more — LIFE at 75: LIFE Photographers Look Back)

life:

When Albert Einstein died on April 18, 1955, his funeral and cremation were intensely private affairs, and only one photographer managed to capture the events of that extraordinary day: LIFE magazine’s Ralph Morse.

“I grabbed my cameras and drove the 90 miles to Princeton from my home in northern New Jersey. Einstein died at the Princeton Hospital, so I headed there first. But it was chaos — so many journalists, photographers, onlookers milling around outside what, back then, was a really small hospital. ‘Forget this,’ I said, and headed over to the building where Einstein’s office was.”

Above: Ralph Morse’s photograph of Einstein’s office in Princeton, taken hours after Einstein’s death and captured exactly as the Nobel Prize-winner left it.

(see more LIFE at 75: LIFE Photographers Look Back)

/5 months ago
/467 notes

theworldwelivein:

Each time I (by Mohamed Tantawi)

theworldwelivein:

Each time I (by Mohamed Tantawi)

/5 months ago
/3,214 notes

theworldwelivein:

Foggy Dubai, AE | Taken from the Burj Dubay Tower© daveandmairi

theworldwelivein:

Foggy Dubai, AE | Taken from the Burj Dubay Tower
© daveandmairi

/5 months ago
/505 notes

theworldwelivein:

Winter in Seattle, Washington©  Pierre Galin

theworldwelivein:

Winter in Seattle, Washington
©  Pierre Galin

/6 months ago
/1,416 notes

theworldwelivein:

Stars, Milky Way, Jackson Lake, Grand Teton NP, Wyoming© IronRodArt - Royce Bair
Technical Info: Click here for exposure, camera, lens, and how to.

theworldwelivein:

Stars, Milky Way, Jackson Lake, Grand Teton NP, Wyoming
© IronRodArt - Royce Bair

Technical Info: Click here for exposure, camera, lens, and how to.

/6 months ago
/940 notes

theworldwelivein:

Colors of bamboo | Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan©  * tathei *

theworldwelivein:

Colors of bamboo | Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan
©  * tathei *