Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Vibrant Macro Photographs of Coral by Felix Salazar

LA-based photographer and composer Felix Salazar recently captured some wonderful macro photos of several inhabitants in his salt water aquariums. The shocking variety of color makes the coral look like digital renderings, but Salazar assures me each is a unique photo selected from hundreds of attempts to get just the right shot as he experimented with focus and light. You can see many more on his website. (via my modern met)

Read more... http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2013/01/vibrant-macro-photographs-of-coral-by-felix-salazar/

Joni Niemelä’s Macro Photographs Capture Carnivorous Plants’ Alien-Like Structures

Joni Niemelä captures the moments within nature often looked over, the extreme details seen best through macro photography and an imaginative eye. One of Niemelä's photographic obsessions is the carnivorous plant Drosera, more commonly known as the "Sundew," a nickname which refers to droplets that collect on the plant similar to morning dew.

Read more... http://www.thisiscolossal.com/2015/07/carnivorous-plants-joni-niemela/

Sunday, July 5, 2015

This gigantic LEGO American flag will give you all the patriotic feels

Because it's July 4 weekend, we're giving you this really, really big LEGO American flag. You're welcome.

Measuring 9½ feet tall and 14 feet wide, the ginormous, 546-pound red, white and blue monster — the largest LEGO American flag ever, by the way — was built Wednesday by more than 15,000 visitors at Washington's National Museum of American History using 100,000-plus LEGO bricks. (The build was created to celebrate the grand opening of the museum's brand-spankin'-new Innovation Wing but also because, hey, YAY AMERICA.)

Read more... http://entertainthis.usatoday.com/2015/07/03/july-4-lego-american-flag-exclusive/

Friday, July 3, 2015

Artist Drills Coconuts into Lamps That Shine Gorgeous Patterns of Lights

Artist Vainius Kubilius carefully crafts lamps that project visually exciting and exotic patterns of light on adjacent walls. Unlike your typical light designer, Kubilius doesn't simply work with metals and manmade materials. Instead, this creative innovator incorporates coconuts into his products, which he designs under the label Nymphs. "The head of the lamp is made out of coconut," Kubilius tells us, "but after careful shaving, waxing, and drilling, it shines like some sort of jewel."

Read more... http://www.mymodernmet.com/profiles/blogs/vainius-kubilius-nymphs

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