A silent, color footage of London in the 1920s, shot by an early British film pioneer named Claude Frisse-Greene.
It’s like a beautifully dusty old postcard you’d find in a junk store, but moving. Note the horse carts, alongside the “motor buses.”
A silent, color footage of London in the 1920s, shot by an early British film pioneer named Claude Frisse-Greene.
It’s like a beautifully dusty old postcard you’d find in a junk store, but moving. Note the horse carts, alongside the “motor buses.”
A short time-lapse film focusing on the movement and life in Canberra during night time hours. Cinematography, Direction and Editing by Rowen Grant. Music&
(via nandoom)
(via 8thfloorwindow)
Pretty cool interface.
How Animals Eat Their Food [video]
Latest Japanese school girl photo craze! Faux Dragon Ball attacks!
We’re totes gonna try this one. You just need a little timing and knee-highs.
Japanese School Girls Dragon Ball Re-Enactments
(Thanks, Selina!)
Totally screw up - it’s how to succeed.
Winner of the ‘Design for Poverty’ contest by Yanko design in 2008, Rain Drop by Evan Gants is a concept system to cheaply collect and store rain water in plastic bottles. The system is quite ingenious and can be used to create running water for washing hands.
(via starrglimpse)
Carnival Interactive Aquarium (by Todd vanderlin)
Andy Ellison works at the BU medical school in Boston where he frequently works with a research-only MRI scanner. Over the past few months he’s been sharing some fantastic animated gifs of his calibration and quality control scans using assorted fruits, vegetables and other plants.
Just plain delightful.
Look how beautiful nature is when you do science to it!