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sdedalus

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ancestry + great photography



Edward S. Curtis - Sioux Chiefs c. 1905



The Scout c. 1908



Arikara medicine fraternity -- The Prayer c. 1908



Smoky Day at The Sugar Bowl 30th of June 1923

how do you guys get around the picture being resized so small...
 

the shah

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my niqqaz up in the mountains of tora bora, will soon venture up there myself

CCgsP.jpg
 

the shah

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yeah being deployed there next month for some field work / recon, can't detail much more aside that it's using a recently launched satellite for some incredible imaging stuff :slayer:
 

sipang

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I hope you'll take many macros of succulents and other delicious plants with that newfangled satellite of yours, this thread is ready when you are.
 

sipang

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HAHA that second one is a classic.

Virilité par l'arme à feu: feu à volonté
 

sipang

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RIP Sori Yanagi







Sori Yanagi, whose designs for stools and kitchen pots brought the simplicity and purity of Japanese decor into the everyday, has died. He was 96.

Yanagi's curvaceous "butterfly stool," evocative of a Japanese shrine gate, won an award at the Milan Triennale museum and design exhibition in 1957 and helped elevate him to international stature. The work — made of two pieces of molded plywood fixed together with a brass pin — later joined the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Louvre museum in Paris.

Another typical Yanagi design was the stackable plastic stool, humorously called the "elephant stool," because of its resemblance to the animal's chunky feet.

The lines and curves of Yanagi's designs were as distinctly Japanese as they were universal, winning him fans — and a place in homes not only in Japan but around the world — for his teapots, ceramic cups and even the lowly whisk, which became artwork with his touch.

"Things that are easy to use survive, regardless of what is fashionable, and people want to use them forever," Yanagi said in a 2002 Japan Times article. "But if things are created merely for a passing vogue and not for a purpose, people soon get bored with them and throw them away. "The fundamental problem," he added, "is that many products are created to be sold, not used."

Yanagi was born in Tokyo on June 29, 1915. He chose design for his career after falling in love with the work of architect Le Corbusier while studying oil painting at the National University of Arts in Tokyo. He opened his own industrial design office in the early 1950s after working in a Tokyo architect's firm. Credited with paving the way on the international stage for younger Japanese designers, Yanagi also took up more monumental pieces, such as bridges and the Olympic torch for the 1972 Sapporo Winter Games, as well as a motorcycle and toys.

He supported Japanese traditional art throughout his life and served as director of the Japan Folk Crafts Museum in Tokyo. The museum was founded by his father, Soetsu Yanagi, who led the "mingei" movement celebrating Japanese folk craft.

"I try to create things that we human beings feel are useful in our daily lives," the younger Yanagi said in the Japan Times story. "During the process, beauty is born naturally."





 

sipang

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I've been actively trying to convince snowman to get that hybrid specimen which is on sale on a webstore that shall remain nameless, I have yet to succeed.
 
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