aisle fourteen

Apr 20

(Source: jinkies, via ffferg)

Apr 20
Apr 19

(Source: 40licks, via booooooom)

"My love is building a building around you, a frail slippery house, a strong fragile house (beginning at the singular beginning of your smile) a skilful uncouth prison, a precise clumsy prison (building that and this into Thus, Around the reckless magic of your mouth) my love is building a magic,a discrete tower of magic and (as i guess) when Farmer Death (whom fairies hate) shall crumble the mouth-flower fleet He’ll not my tower, laborious, casual where the surrounded smile hangs breathless."

- E.E Cummings, Selected Poems (via violentwavesofemotion)

Apr 19
likeafieldmouse:

Edvard Munch - Moonlight (1895)
Apr 19
Apr 18
fuckyeahmineralogy:

Spodumene var. kunzite; Afghanistan
Apr 14

fuckyeahmineralogy:

Spodumene var. kunzite; Afghanistan

(via earthcrystal)

Apr 14
lostsplendor:

20 Sided Die: Egyptian, Between 200 BC and 400 AD (via Retronaut - Egyptian Twenty-sided Die)
Apr 14

lostsplendor:

20 Sided Die: Egyptian, Between 200 BC and 400 AD (via Retronaut - Egyptian Twenty-sided Die)

(via lostsplendor)

Apr 13

leslieseuffert:

Photographs by: Dennis BudkoMarc SzeglatMichael Zelensky, and xflo:w

“In the far east of Russia, on a peninsula called Kamchatka, are stunningly surreal-looking ice caves that are formed under incredibly interesting conditions. Fire and ice are involved, or volcanoes and glaciers. As EPOD states about one, “It was formed by a stream flowing from the hot springs associated with the Mutnovsky volcano. This stream flows beneath glacial ice on the flanks of Mutnovsky. Because glaciers on Kamchatka volcanoes have been melting in recent years, the roof of this cave is now so thin that sunlight penetrates through it, eerily illuminating the icy structures within.” Kamachatka lies at similar latitudes to Great Britain. It experiences extremely cold winters and is covered in snow from October to late May. The peninsula is also known for a chain of active volcanoes that make up the peninsula’s spine. Interestingly, until the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Kamchatka Peninsula was strictly off-limits to foreigners and most Russians. There was a military base on the southern end of the peninsula, which housed submarines that carried nuclear ballistic missiles. Since that time, it has increasingly becoming a popular spot for adrenaline junkies, especially those looking to experience extreme winter sports in a near pristine environment. Photographers have also been discovering all that the Kamchatka Pensinsula has to offer, as you can see here. As photographer Denis Budko states, “These snow caves, are usually hidden from foreign eyes under big thicknesses of snow…”

(via scienceyoucanlove)

b-c-d:

via Shoot&Share for iPhone
Apr 4
Apr 2

(Source: oldchum)

mineralia:

Elbaite Tourmaline on Smoky Quartz from Afghanistan 
by Exceptional Minerals
Mar 31

mineralia:

Elbaite Tourmaline on Smoky Quartz from Afghanistan 

by Exceptional Minerals

(via fuckyeahcrystals)