I write differently from what I speak, I speak differently from what I think, I think differently from the way I ought to think, and so it all proceeds into deepest darkness.

— Franz Kafka   (via mercurieux)

(Source: stxxz.us)

roane72:

John Barrowman at the 2013 Phoenix Comic Con (x)

in which John Barrowman does his best Tumblr impression


themarke:

Grand Isle (LA) waterspout this afternoon.


wiggleofjudas:

I Am Extremely Productive Unless You Want Me To Do A Thing Unrelated To Fandom: an autobiography by me

I do not have the words to express how much I relate to that wow

fairytalemood:

Grimm’s Fairy Tales illustrated by Felicitas Kuhn

Brother and Sister, The Six Swans, One-Eye, Two-Eyes and Three-Eyes, Rapunzel


gloriouspondchester:

what do will graham and sherlock holmes have in common

a deerstalker

i-heart-histo:

Neat Histology Decals

Props to this South African company for designing these cool little histology decals for placing on the windows of African high schools in regions where purchasing microscopes and slides was not affordable.

What a neat idea to bring histology to underprivileged schools or the even the home classroom. I also think these would look fantastic with the sun shining through them on any office/bedroom/laboratory window.


aiyon0206:

Crow Sherlock !


khorazir:

“Carnation, Lily, Sherlock, John”
For Afrogeekgoddess, happy birthday! I seem to remember that you like carnations. Have some virtual ones and a wonderful day.
Apart from the season and the flowers it brings, the painting is of course inspired by “Carnation, Lily, Lily, Rose” by John Singer Sargent.
When I see on Twitter that someone with an egg avatar and two followers has gotten a writer I know to spend ages arguing back and forth about nothing, there is part of me that thinks, “Why bother? The world is full of awfulness; you will never beat back all of it.” We all ignore things all day long; if we didn’t, we’d never get anything done.

art-and-fury:

pickledelephantDream sequence designed by Salvador Dalí in Spellbound (1945) by Alfred Hitchcock


theartofanimation:

Nika Goltz - The Little Mermaid