"BYUTI" & THE INSPIRATION


All together now! “HER NEW THEM” 



“HER”



“THEM”



“NEW”



Good Ol’ “DREPH” Gone and dun it again. Loving the strategic reflection.

dreph:

Costa del Salford

(Source: dreph)



“The Preditor Effect”.

archiemcphee:

Imagine walking through a forest and seeing just a glimpse of these awesome invisible figures! They’re the creative work of artist Rob Mulholland, who makes these sculptures out of mirrored Perspex (or acrylic glass). It has been called the Predator effect after the 1987 film where an alien life form seamlessly blends into its background. Mulholland has previously installed these chameleon-like figures in the woods around Alloa, Loch Ard and the David Marshall Lodge in Scotland.

Mulholland told BBC Scotland that the key to the effect was creating a distorted reflection. “It alters reality, one moment you see them and the next moment they blend in. There’s an ambiguity to it - it doesn’t answer all the questions.”

[via My Modern Metropolis]


Via books, paper, scissors


So now, How do you feel?

thehumangenius:

First ‘Heartless’ Man: You Don’t Really Need A Heart, Or A Pulse

Two doctors Billy Cohn and Bud Frazier from the Texas Heart Institute successfully replaced a dying man’s heart with a device—proving that it is possible for your body to be kept alive without a heart, or a pulse.

In the short film ‘Heart Stop Beating’ by Jeremiah Zagar of Focus Forward Films, Zagar documents the process of the doctors—from cutting out the whole heart of 50 calves and replacing it with centrifugal pumps, to finally implanting it into their patient Craig Lewis.

The turbine-like device, that are simple whirling rotors, developed by the doctors does not beat like a heart, rather provides a ‘continuous flow’ like a garden hose.

After the doctors experimented on one of the calves, Abigail, Doctor Cohn told NPR: “If you listened to her chest with a stethoscope, you wouldn’t hear a heartbeat. If you examined her arteries, there’s no pulse. If you hooked her up to an EKG, she’d be flat-lined.”

Craig Lewis was a 55-year-old, dying from amyloidosis, which causes a build-up of abnormal proteins. The proteins clog the organs so much that they stop working, according to NPR.

But after the operation, with the ‘machine’ as his heart’s replacement, Lewis’ blood continued to spin and move through his body.

However, when doctors put a stethoscope to his chest, no heartbeat or pulse can be heard (only a ‘humming’ sound)—which “by all criteria that we conventionally use to analyze patients”, Doctor Cohn said, he is dead.

This is proof that “human physiology can be supported without a pulse”.

HOW DOES THIS NOT HAVE ALL THE NOTES


Via { where the evening splits in half }


Making the world beautiful again. One home at a time.

rustybreak:

JR

He’s in my top five too.





alecshao:

Iori Tomita, New World Transparent Specimens

“Ex-fisherman turned artist, Tomita transforms marine life with the technique of preserving and dying organism specimens… He first removes the scales and skin of the marine life that have been preserved in formaldehyde, then soaks it in a mixture of blue stain, ethyl alcohol and glacial acetic acid… The bones are then stained and the specimen is preserved in glycerin.”

Via


Via Job's Wife

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