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Monday, April 30, 2012

Sunday assortment, end of April 2012


The Most Annoyingly Cute Thing Ever

Cat toy force field

Greedy hamster Tom & Jerry

Inspiring Cara Black volley practice

What are these people made of, fairy bubbles or something?
Acrobatic 2010 Womens groups Russia

fun stockings hack


awww, look at those ears, those expressions and the curly tails




Came across this German auction site, called bloss-auktionen.de, and feel moved by other people's memories, their possessions, their histories.  Here are a handful of the items. I loved the German toys, especially the miniature stores for children. But here is an odd one, World War II Nazi and Hitler cigarette cards. Nazi cigarette cards?! Had to Google and sure enough, they also sell them on eBay.


scraps of lace and trim that must have been part of somebody's sewing box

Love this box, the burled veneer, the pretty key

And here are the toy miniature stores. Amazing details.








a South Indian Tanjore painting, Rishaba Vahanam, which means Shiva and Parvati on a bull


ダシ巻き玉子焼 Japanese Omelette

材料 Ingredients
玉子 eggs 8
佐藤 sugar 30g
塩 salt 3g
みりん Mirin 1tsp (1パイ)
酒 Sake 1 tsp (1パイ)
カツオダシ Bonito Stock 180ml


3 year old finger painting genius

This is basically the design of my tiny "spare" bedroom, except it's inside a room
the same dimensions as the furniture

banana dragon

Halliburton charged with selling nuclear technology to Iran


Huh, so this is what's dance music these days, a sort of percussive playing of sound samples

World's oldest marathon runner, Fajua Singh, age 100

Just discovered Spotify as a way to listen to music. It's excellent!






The Invisible Mother was a phrase used for a mother disguising herself with fabric, so that her child or children could be photographed. the results were unintentionally funny and sad at the same time. ‘This was a practice where the mother, often disguised or hiding, often under a spread, holds her baby tightly for the photographer to insure a sharply focused image.’





Inspiring: Before and after

Before and after

the art of Mississippi banks and stream channels
(right click on image and open in a new window to see full size)

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