Malicious Wallydrags
In the process of editing photos from two trips ago to Maryhill Museum. They have the most patient peacocks I’ve ever encountered, this one let me take pictures lying down behind it with an elbow propped in its tail feathers for balance.
(via artistic-aviary)
(Source: nikita6266)
(via terriblyartistic21)
(Source: thenearsightedmonkey)
Dear Creature’s Fall 2012 collection.
Adorableee!!
When Joseph-Nicephore Niepce took the first photograph in 1828, his photographic plate required an exposure of eight hours. That exposure time was drastically reduced across the course of the nineteenth century, so that by the 1890s the Collodion process had cut exposure times to two or three seconds.
Nevertheless, a three second exposure meant that subjects had to stand very still to avoid being blurred, and holding a smile for that period was tricky. As a result, we have a tendency to see our Victorian ancestors as even more formal and stern than they might have been.
These pictures are drawn from the Flickr group “The Smiling Victorian” and show a perhaps surprising side to the people who’s “now” was a hundred years before our own.
(via yoursandmann)
(Source: dennyyeah, via astudyinpanic)
..d.dfcdfbdfb
Can this be an upgrade or something so I can have it too?
(Source: andrewbreitel, via teenidlexo)
Queued: this is just adorable
What are you doing, tiny snake?
I WILL EAT THIS LEAF
LOOK AT HIM HE’S TRYING SO HARD HE’S SUCH A LITTLE BADASS
(via artistic-aviary)
(Source: kabuki-onna, via cookingwithkyle)
ADVENTURE!
(Source: suure, via tazzmarazz)
(Source: emissarymusic, via inter-vivos)


