Vinyl record necklace
by arohasilhouettes @ Etsy Yes.
Exploring the Infinite
by arohasilhouettes @ Etsy Yes.
http://www.zee.me/blog/ Great blog Zee.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0786839198/ I saw this book at the bookstore the other day and it made me smile! Hooray for Grace!
Images of books on shelves are seen projected on the walls of the Tower of David in Jerusalem’s Old City – part of a show called “Or Shalem, Jerusalem Lights the Night”, staged by a group called Skertz on October 7, 2008
You can do it yourself using items you may already have around the house with this technique: Or, you can spend a few bucks and buy the hardware from Vat19 without damaging any of your beloved books! Either way, it's pretty neato! Librarian Chick approves!
I was trying to write a serious blog post, dangitall, but then Charon had to go and comment with a link to this… … how Lord of the Rings really should have ended. Hilarious.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/1597091308/ From the page: “Each portion forming a reduced-size copy of the whole, a fractal is forever fragmented, both chaotic and ordered, endlessly complex. Timothy Green’s American Fractal sees this pattern emerge from the fabric of modern culture, as it navigates the personal, the political, and the metaphysical, in a lyric dreamscape in which an eerie chaos lurks just behind
Shadow Puppets My grandma kept this book at her house when I was a kid.
“A competent and self-confident person is incapable of jealousy in anything. Jealousy is invariably a symptom of neurotic insecurity.” – Robert A. Heinlein
via Dark Roasted Blend
Historical Anatomies on the Web is a neat reference site that gives Internet users access to some very impressive high quality images from important anatomical atlases. The project emphasizes only the images from the collection, not the entire books. Many of them are quite beautiful.
If this photographic journal does not touch you, you must be one cold-hearted SOB. What is my obsession with old people and death lately anyway? After I finished reading Tuesdays With Morrie, I watched the movie on YouTube, then I watched the Ted Koppel interviews. What else can I say about them other than this: I feel as though I
I enjoyed a quick read the other day, a book called The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom, which had been recommended by my sister. Though I don't believe in heaven or hell personally, the book was sorta touching and an easy read. So once I finished it, I picked up another book by Albom that I