A bit of a thinker.

I'm 19 and I go to college. I like music, video games, anime, women, cars, and pretty much anything with a purpose. (Also Emma Watson)
illroots:

PUSHA TON.

illroots:

PUSHA TON.

StL Science Center (Taken with instagram)

StL Science Center (Taken with instagram)

(via omghayley)

(Source: whalebiology)

An Igloo made of Books by Miler Lagos

(Source: fer1972, via thingsorganizedneatly)

(Source: thankyouharryp, via zacmonty)

(Source: omghayley)

(Source: complexmagazine)

thedrunkenmoogle:

Besaid Island (Final Fantasy X cocktail)
Ingredients:30 ml white rum (Bacardi Superior used)30 ml watermelon liqueur (Marie Brizard Watermelon used)1 lime (for lime juice and garnish)
Directions: Mix the rum and watermelon liqueur in a lowball glass over ice.  Squeeze in lime juice and add a lime wedge to the side as a garnish.  While this isn’t a drink you would order at a Blitzball match, it seems absolutely perfect for watching the Spira sunset on the beach.
Drink created and photographed by Cocktail.daa.jp.
Mood music:
 

thedrunkenmoogle:

Besaid Island (Final Fantasy X cocktail)

Ingredients:
30 ml white rum (Bacardi Superior used)
30 ml watermelon liqueur (Marie Brizard Watermelon used)
1 lime (for lime juice and garnish)

Directions: Mix the rum and watermelon liqueur in a lowball glass over ice.  Squeeze in lime juice and add a lime wedge to the side as a garnish.  While this isn’t a drink you would order at a Blitzball match, it seems absolutely perfect for watching the Spira sunset on the beach.

Drink created and photographed by Cocktail.daa.jp.

Mood music:


 

jtotheizzoe:

Greg Dunn: Neurons Painted As Japanese Scrolls

Greg Dunn paints neurons. He uses brushless methods that allow the ink to roll spontaneously across the paper, recreating the ordered randomness of neural projections. He also uses smooth brush strokes that he says “…capture the natural molecular unfolding of nature.”
Here’s what he has to say about what artists can learn from science (and maybe vice versa):

Fundamentally art and science are ruled by the same principal. You must start any project with a clear idea of what your question is. You start with a clear idea and you follow it up with a clear hypothesis. You are trying to get to the root of this question. And when you start painting you are trying to get to the resolution of this question. If you don’t have a clear foundation you will never produce something that is great. 

(via Huffington Post)

jtotheizzoe:

Greg Dunn: Neurons Painted As Japanese Scrolls

Greg Dunn paints neurons. He uses brushless methods that allow the ink to roll spontaneously across the paper, recreating the ordered randomness of neural projections. He also uses smooth brush strokes that he says “…capture the natural molecular unfolding of nature.”

Here’s what he has to say about what artists can learn from science (and maybe vice versa):

Fundamentally art and science are ruled by the same principal. You must start any project with a clear idea of what your question is. You start with a clear idea and you follow it up with a clear hypothesis. You are trying to get to the root of this question. And when you start painting you are trying to get to the resolution of this question. If you don’t have a clear foundation you will never produce something that is great. 

(via Huffington Post)

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

Taken with instagram

(Source: complexmagazine)