Ellie Goulding - ‘Anything Could Happen’ (by abrassardf)

Osiria Rose has a lovely two color combination of blood-red petals on the inside and silvery white on the outside
(via k-k-k-kush)
Photography by Martin Klimas
Photographer Martin Klimas was born in 1971 in Lake of Konstanz, Germany. In his pictures Klimas breaks recognizable objects so they become something else, and stops us just at the moment of transformation. The aspect of destroying is not the most important one in his work. Let’s say it is a catalyst to unleash and study this transformation. The hardest part of his work is to smash so many figurines until he finds one that truly is showing him something new. He is in that sense a sculptor, but he has only a 5000th of a second to build his sculpture.
(via erinerobb78)
- teddybear: "Just thought you ota No I would crawl naked threw broken glass and roll around in it just to have the chance to steal a kiss form you just saying :-) I am NOT REPEAT NOT hitting on you just telling a little early morning truth to a BEAUTIFUL lady and friend"
- me: o.o .......
- me: O.O ........
- me: Replied to him "wow. thanks."
- me: -=smiles=- thinking to herself *that is the most fucked up but romantic thing ever said to me*
Emmanuelle Brisson: L’air frissonne des choses qui s’enfuient (The Air Shivers of Things Fleeing)
A Cheetah and Tiger Sculpted from Wire Coathangers by David Mach
This made me cry and I wasn’t even finished. Oh my. This is me.
“Do you kiss your friends on the cheek? Do you sleep beside them when they’re sad, even if it makes your lover mad?”…….”I wanna know if you bleed sometimes through other people’s wounds.”
I do.
(via polaroid-pictures)
Green Pedestrian Crossing created by Jody Xiong
The China Environmental Protection Foundation developed an outdoor campaign, displayed on the street, to creatively promote this message. They decided to leverage a busy pedestrian crossing; a place where both pedestrians and drivers meet.
The campaign involved laying a canvas 12.6 metres long by 7 metres wide on the ground, thus covering the pedestrian crossing with a large leafless tree. On either side of the road, beneath the traffic lights, were placed sponge cushions soaked in green, environmentally friendly, washable paint. As pedestrians walked towards the crossing, they stepped on the green sponge, thus leaving green foot imprints on the canvas of the tree. Each ‘green’ footprint on the canvas looked like leaves growing on a bare tree, which made people feel that by walking they could create a greener environment.
The ‘Green Pedestrian Crossing’ was carried out across 7 thoroughfares in Shanghai. The campaign was then extended to 132 roads across 15 cities in China, with a participation exceeding 3,920,000 people.
Watch their video below:
A Perfect Circle - Outsider (Director’s Cut) (by emimusic)





