How uncomfortably humans deal with silence.
I smell a fucking challenge
Lets do it Jesse
(via princessbritain)
skittles what the fuck
i think they tasted the wrong rainbow
(via supernatural-yaoi-freak)
CARTOONIST FOUND DEAD IN HIS APARTMENT
DETAILS ARE SKETCHY
Get in.
ah yes, come in, come into my house. ah yes, now step out, step right out the door. wonderful. wonderful visit. come again.
(via v-aas)
First time doing yoga by David Somerville [website]
(Source: tastefullyoffensive, via yourejustalineinasong)
necromorph-slayinglovemachine:
An anon from last night suggested Gastly/Hitmonchan HOPE THIS IS GOOD ENOUGH
HOLY SHIT
(via guns-gold-diamonds)
I went on Google Images and typed in Samurai Jack and
I was not disapointed
(via cocokat)
For an art installation entitled Ballroom Luminoso, artists Joe O’Connell and Blessing Hancock created and hung six awesome chandeliers from a concrete underpass in San Antonio, Texas. The chandeliers were custom-made using structural steel, recycled bicycle parts, and custom LEDs that project a field of silhouettes of sprockets, gears, and other shapes onto the blank slate of an otherwise unremarkable industrial surface.
From the artist’s statement about the project:
“Ballroom Luminoso references the area’s past, present, and future in the design of its intricately detailed medallions. The images in the medallions draw on the community’s agricultural history, strong Hispanic heritage, and burgeoning environmental movement. The medallions are a play on the iconography of La Loteria, which has become a touchstone of Hispanic culture. Utilizing traditional tropes like La Escalera (the Ladder), La Rosa (the Rose), and La Sandía (the Watermelon), the piece alludes to the neighborhood’s farming roots and horticultural achievements. Each character playfully rides a bike acting as a metaphor for the neighborhood’s environmental progress, its concurrent eco-restoration projects, and its developing cycling culture.”
[via Colossal]
(via eloquentnightmare)
Luray’s Cavern Wishing Well, Virginia, 1974 (via Imgur)
Adolf Hiremy-Hirschl - Die Seelen des Acheron (1898)


I was not disapointed
