Quincy Mine Shaft House No. 6 in Hancock, MI. Built in 1892 and destroyed by a fire in 1956
Via https://bsky.app/profile/midwestmodern.bsky.social/post/3laoue2uysk2b
Quincy Mine Shaft House No. 6 in Hancock, MI. Built in 1892 and destroyed by a fire in 1956
Via https://bsky.app/profile/midwestmodern.bsky.social/post/3laoue2uysk2b
Overhead shot of the I Love Lucy studio
Via https://www.threads.net/@my_good_old_days/post/DBoLC6xIsnv
Via https://autonomous.zone/@heatdeath/113375370591794482
Cover of The Cat Who Loved the Sea by Rhoda Goldstein, illustrated by Len Ebert. 1968.
Via https://archive.org/details/catwholovedsea0000rhod/mode/2up
“She’s an orbweaver, which means she makes the circular web that most people associate with spiders. There is not much info on the species, it was first described in 1895. (Xylethrus superbus) Cuyabeno Reserve, Ecuador” — Jen Cross
Via https://bsky.app/profile/jencross.bsky.social/post/3l7txkqu2yk27
“a black and white scratchboard drawing - the lower third of the image features a vintage muscle car speeding on a road, while in the upper portion of the image a giant humanoid monster is emerging from stormy clouds, its clawed hand reaching out of the clouds and its round white eyes staring straight at the viewer”
Via https://bsky.app/profile/nicodelort.bsky.social/post/3l7bgk5cnmw2z
How To Lose Friends And Scare People
Via https://bsky.app/profile/weirdxmas.bsky.social/post/3l66ll5w7c22o
“Keeping the time short on these, really focusing on their color and value choices.” – Taylor Williams
Via https://www.threads.net/@taylor.williams.art/post/C_hjEwVISSO/
“I do a b/w 4-value thumbnail before doing a #gouache painting. This process is crucial for me to figure out how the picture will turn out.” — Tommy Kim
California Street, San Francisco, in the fog this morning, as the sun begins to rise, April 26, 2023 – Gary Lenhart
“A sophisticated network of overland paths permitted frontier travel across Pennsylvania during the French and Indian War. From the Great Swamp in the east to the Ohio Country in the west, Indian and European settlers alike traversed mountaintops and steep valleys along well-worn paths that linked the remote parts of William Penn’s woodlands.” – Map of important Indian Paths in Pennsylvania, circa 1770
Via https://bsky.app/profile/rsimmon.bsky.social/post/3l6qlsjf3zl2w