Posts tagged so cool

The Monster Engine is an amazing project by artist Dave Devries. He takes children’s drawings and faithfully reproduces them as art. The results are stunning (and really quite scary).
The Monster Engine website
The Monster Engine is an amazing project by artist Dave Devries. He takes children’s drawings and faithfully reproduces them as art. The results are stunning (and really quite scary).
The Monster Engine website

The Monster Engine is an amazing project by artist Dave Devries. He takes children’s drawings and faithfully reproduces them as art. The results are stunning (and really quite scary).

The Monster Engine website

jubilantics:

zirschnitz:

Books won’t stay banned. They won’t burn. Ideas won’t go to jail. In the long run of history, the censor and the inquisitor have always lost. The only sure weapon against bad ideas is better ideas. — Alfred Whitney Griswald

Banned Books Mugshots: Alaska Young (Looking for Alaska), Janie Crawford (Their Eyes Were Watching God), Holden Caulfield (The Catcher in the Rye), Harry Potter (Harry Potter), and Hester Prynne (The Scarlet Letter).

Banned Books Week is September 22 - 28! Visit Banned Books Week’s site or the American Library Association’s banned books page for more information!

Weapon of Mass Instruction

image

Argentinian artist Raul Lemesoff has converted a 1979 Ford Falcon tank into a mobile library which carries books around the streets of Buenos Aires and lets people take them home for free. Raul calls his vehicle “Arma De Instruccion Masiva” or “Weapon of Mass Instruction”.

via Junk Culture

cracked:
“ “Each square represents a different character and indicates the primary Muppeteer(s) for that character, as well as the year and production in which the character made its debut. Borders align with hair/hat colour, background aligns with...
cracked:
“ “Each square represents a different character and indicates the primary Muppeteer(s) for that character, as well as the year and production in which the character made its debut. Borders align with hair/hat colour, background aligns with...

cracked:

“Each square represents a different character and indicates the primary Muppeteer(s) for that character, as well as the year and production in which the character made its debut. Borders align with hair/hat colour, background aligns with skin/fur colour, and colour of the abbreviated name represents nose colour (for characters with noses that is).”

The Periodic Table of the Muppets (via explore-blog)