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brancusi hand mades
furniture in 24 hrs
nomadic furniture
Hand-Painted Wood Parcheesi Game Board
pinch pot stan bitters
previously
people literally surfing the internet
Katherine Pettit Book of Vegetable Dyes
via nothing is new
scientist advises roundup causes birth defects
bees and ccd
HOT enough for you? Head for Prospect Park in Brooklyn. Not the rich, intoxicating greenery of its 585 acres, but the shady coolness of any of Olmsted & Vaux’s five unique arches designed not as passageways, but as rooms. Taken together they show the sensitive, humanistic possibilities of the city — which its citizens have betrayed.
industrial depot - screws, fasteners, etc...
saving hard books
gio ponti man of 1000 talents
banked bike track / via old chum archive
wood workers working / inside the nakashima compound
Unseen Eames: Films from the Vault
one film, a q and a on design w/ charles is posted on the link
rip jackass star ryan dunn
rip larry fischer aka wildman
In 1947, Erich Fromm, a humanist, psychoanalyst and philosopher, developed a theory of character that divided people into five “orientations,” mostly determined by their relationship to stuff. He characterized four of these — the receptive, exploitive, hoarding and marketing orientations — as part of the “having” mode, which is focused on consuming, obtaining and possessing. (The fifth orientation was “productive,” which focuses on experience and human connection.) Fromm specifically linked the hoarding orientation to the Protestant work ethic and the American merchant middle class and argued that this orientation is characterized by, among other things, being “constipated and squinty.”
rip bill haast
A secret of his success was the immunity he had built up by injecting himself every day for more than 60 years with a mix of venoms from 32 snake species. He suspected the inoculations might have explained his extraordinarily good health, but he was reluctant to make that claim, he said, until he reached 100.
Mr. Haast, who was director of the Miami Serpentarium Laboratories, a snake-venom producer near Punta Gorda, Fla., died of natural causes on Wednesday at his home in southwest Florida, his wife, Nancy, said. He was 100.