designdust:

Amazing view.

designdust:

Amazing view.

(Source: anthonyyyy)

allthingseurope:

Isle of Capri, Italy
(by AntyDiluvian)

allthingseurope:

Isle of Capri, Italy

(by AntyDiluvian)

bluemd:

Dancer Adjusting Her Slipper by Edgar Degas, 1873, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

bluemd:

Dancer Adjusting Her Slipper by Edgar Degas, 1873, The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

(via zeroing)

officialstyledotcom:

Waiters wearing Etro aprons. JM (Taken with instagram)

officialstyledotcom:

Waiters wearing Etro aprons. JM (Taken with instagram)

after  6/3

after 6/3

mianoti:

Roads and rain by Abbas Kiarostami
[Similar photos I’ve taken; and, being on the road under a deluge, I guess I’ll come home with similar pictures again.]

mianoti:

Roads and rain by Abbas Kiarostami

[Similar photos I’ve taken; and, being on the road under a deluge, I guess I’ll come home with similar pictures again.]

artistswanted:

Cinzia Rizzi

artistswanted:

Cinzia Rizzi

cjwho:

Swimming pool with New York skyline, Mumbai
The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.
It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.
The idea was conceived by advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, who were commissioned by banking giant HSBC to promote its £50million project tackling climate change.
The Ogilvy team came up with an innovative way to show the adverse impact of global climate change. They glued an aerial view of a city to the base of a swimming pool. When the pool was filled with water, it gave a shocking effect akin to a city submerged in water. The visual of a sunken city shocked swimmers and onlookers, driving home the impact of global warming, and how it could destroy our world someday.
http://www.ogilvy.com

cjwho:

Swimming pool with New York skyline, Mumbai

The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.

It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.

The idea was conceived by advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, who were commissioned by banking giant HSBC to promote its £50million project tackling climate change.

The Ogilvy team came up with an innovative way to show the adverse impact of global climate change. They glued an aerial view of a city to the base of a swimming pool.
When the pool was filled with water, it gave a shocking effect akin to a city submerged in water. The visual of a sunken city shocked swimmers and onlookers, driving home the impact of global warming, and how it could destroy our world someday.

http://www.ogilvy.com

artistswanted:

Today’s Featured Art Takes Times Square Entrant - Alicia Moneva! Photography from Madrid http://bit.ly/JIKLQy

artistswanted:

Today’s Featured Art Takes Times Square Entrant - Alicia Moneva! Photography from Madrid http://bit.ly/JIKLQy

after 5/19

after 5/19