yesterdaywasonly:

Lock and load. 


amyreeder:

Checkitouuut!!!

I got to do an Ultimate Spider-man variant cover.  I think it’ll be for issue 4. Spider-man has been done so many times and so well…I wanted to come up with something people haven’t seen before.  And I’d always wanted to do something M.C. Escher-inspired.  So this is based on his piece “High and Low.”

It was kind of like math but more fun than math.

I have never been a big Spider-Man fan, but I do understand his appeal. And I do always like great art of the guy (whichever guy it might be in the suit). Amy hits this one out of the park.


[youtube [www.youtube.com/watch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=523KJ8pp8DU?feature=oembed&enablejsapi=1&origin=https://safe.txmblr.com&wmode=opaque&w=250&h=141])

laughingsquid:

12-Foot-Long Great White Shark Suddenly Attacks a Boat Filled With Tourists


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skottieyoung:

#DailySketch Powers. A great indie comic by brianmichaelbendis and oeming


laughingsquid:

The Copperhead Fight Scene From ‘Kill Bill: Vol. 1′ Re-Enacted by Kids

On the one hand, very cool.

On the other hand, wrong, wrong, wrong.


marvel1980s:

Spider-Girl Selfie

But we all know her secret identity now, right?


[youtube [www.youtube.com/watch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mAqJmEjCy4E?feature=oembed&enablejsapi=1&origin=https://safe.txmblr.com&wmode=opaque&w=250&h=141])

laughingsquid:

‘Chemistry Life Hacks’, Scientific Tips for Improving Everyday Life


brianmichaelbendis:

Captain America #10 variant cover by Gerald Parel


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brianmichaelbendis:

Ultimate X-Men by David Finch 


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laughingsquid:

A Pictorial History of the Pocket Knife, From 600 BC to Present

As a long-time, every-day carrier of a pocket knife, this is pretty neat.


[gallery]

ruckawriter:

Mangiabarche. Lighthouse Mangiabarche (eater of boats) A very wild coast off Calasetta, Sardinia, Italy.

Photo by Enrico Puddu.


ruckawriter:

A Guide’s Eye View, by Philip Field.

His caption: Two mountain guides direct a helicopter into land high in the Swiss Alps on top of Mt. Gond. I took this shot whilst shooting an extreme ski and snowboard competition - the Nendaz Freeride FWQ. I had been dropped just before on the peak and with the permission of the guides cowered down behind them to capture this shot when the remaining supplies were delivered. My lens took a bit of a battering and I could only hold myself in position properly for a few seconds as the rush of snow debris was insane at this point.


idwcomics:

Samurai Jack #10 Cover by Andy Suriano


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brianmichaelbendis:

Toy Story 2 by Drew Struzan



[youtube [www.youtube.com/watch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xq16iF8RXlA?feature=oembed&enablejsapi=1&origin=https://safe.txmblr.com&wmode=opaque&w=250&h=187])

laughingsquid:

Security Camera Footage Captures Tornado Ravaging Tupelo, Mississippi Church Playground

Hopefully, this is as close as any of us will come to being in the middle of a tornado.


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chartier:

NEEEEEEEEEED

I would go see this.


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starwars:

Artist of the Week - Dave Seeley


[youtube [www.youtube.com/watch](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HOQxxNYSHR0?feature=oembed&enablejsapi=1&origin=https://safe.txmblr.com&wmode=opaque&w=250&h=141])

laughingsquid:

How ‘The LEGO Movie’ Should Have Ended


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instagram:

Exploring Dublin’s Long Room

To view more photos and videos from Dublin’s Trinity College Library, explore the Long Room location page.

Measuring 65 meters (213 feet) in length and housing more than 200,000 of Ireland’s oldest books, the Long Room at Trinity College Library in Dublin stands as a historical and cultural masterpiece.

The library is the largest in Ireland and dates back to the establishment of the university college in 1592. It holds more than 6 million printed works spanning 400 years.

The Long Room was originally built with a flat ceiling, but it was expanded to accommodate upper shelves and a gallery in the 1850s after the library was given legal deposit status in 1801, meaning it receives free copies of all material published in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

In addition to the numerous written works housed within the library, the Long Room also boasts marble busts of great philosophers, writers and artists as well as Ireland’s oldest harp.