Chuck Close

The advice I like to give young artists, or really anybody who’ll listen to me, is not to wait around for inspiration. Inspiration is for amateurs; the rest of us just show up and get to work. If you wait around for the clouds to part and a bolt of lightning to strike you in the brain, you are not going to make an awful lot of work. All the best ideas come out of the process; they come out of the work itself. Things occur to you. If you’re sitting around trying to dream up a great art idea, you can sit there a long time before anything happens. But if you just get to work, something will occur to you and something else will occur to you and somthing else that you reject will push you in another direction. Inspiration is absolutely unnecessary and somehow deceptive. You feel like you need this great idea before you can get down to work, and I find that’s almost never the case.

Via Super Secret Pow Wow.

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Viktor & Rolf, Tori Amos, and Comic Sans

Via Not Naked

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Taking assholes to task

Via A Continuous Lean.

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Love Will Tear Us Apart

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Buddy Rich and Jerry Lewis

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Mingus

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A Sun Halo Beyond Stockholm

Explanation: What’s happened to the Sun? Sometimes it looks like the Sun is being viewed through a large lens. In the above case, however, there are actually millions of lenses: ice crystals. As water freezes in the upper atmosphere, small, flat, six-sided, ice crystals might be formed. As these crystals flutter to the ground, much time is spent with their faces flat, parallel to the ground. An observer may pass through the same plane as many of the falling ice crystals near sunrise or sunset. During this alignment, each crystal can act like a miniature lens, refracting sunlight into our view and creating phenomena like parhelia, the technical term for sundogs. The above image was taken last year in Stockholm, Sweden. Visible in the image center is the Sun, while two bright sundogs glow prominently from both the left and the right. Also visible is the bright 22 degree halo — as well as the rarer and much fainter 46 degree halo — also created by sunlight reflecting off of atmospheric ice crystals.

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day: January 10, 2011

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http://maps.google.com/maps?q=map:+hyde+park+Chicago+IL&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Hyde+Park,+Chicago,+Cook,+Illinois,+United+States&gl=uk&t=h&ll=41.785401,-87.57973&spn=0.002512,0.007725&z=18

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Match ignition, 2000 fps

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A Nice Cup of Tea

Happy 2011!

If you look up ‘tea’ in the first cookery book that comes to hand you will probably find that it is unmentioned; or at most you will find a few lines of sketchy instructions which give no ruling on several of the most important points.

This is curious, not only because tea is one of the main stays of civilization in this country, as well as in Eire, Australia and New Zealand, but because the best manner of making it is the subject of violent disputes.

When I look through my own recipe for the perfect cup of tea, I find no fewer than eleven outstanding points. On perhaps two of them there would be pretty general agreement, but at least four others are acutely controversial. Here are my own eleven rules, every one of which I regard as golden: Continue reading

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“The Queen”

No words…

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Evolution of “Document” Icon Shape

Digibarn: Xerox Star 8010 Interfaces, high quality polaroids (via Seen, Said, Heard)

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After Laughter

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Stamps

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Endings

Books and movies have endings. The Web doesn’t. Thus taking breaks on the Web feels so unnatural.

John Maeda

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Lithium Territorial Pissings

Just because you’re paranoid
Don’t mean they’re not after you…

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P-P-P-P-P-PITTED.

About time. Thanks, Abby!

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Plaque Découpée Universelle

Stencil capable of drawing every letter of the alphabet: uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and punctuation. Based on a stencil invented by Joseph A. David in 1876. Created by Dries Wiewauters and James Goggin.

Seen here helping a pantograph to scale infinity (via James Goggin).

Plaque Découpée Universelle

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Thrasher, December 1986

Continue reading

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Via The Dusty Bookshelf

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