Wonder.
I do not claim any credit for the photos I have reblogged. All due recognition goes to the original artists/photographers.
Wonder.
forget-the-maps:
Every frame of the Harry Potter movies, condensed into a barcode. 
Do you know why there’s a white part at the end? It’s because happiness can be found even in the darkest of times.
weshallneverstop:
Highway to Heaven  |  Parowan496
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nayan666:
I am watching The Pacific
 Check-in to  The Pacific on GetGlue.com
tastepalette:

Everything old is new again. A poster for the Olympics this year designed to look the turn of the century World’s Fair. 
London Olympics 2012!!! 
weshallneverstop:
[Caption this this]  |  Taha Elraaid
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photojojo:
Photo Idea: Use colored gel lenses and snooted flashes to capture these amazing shots of rainbow smoke!
Sean Wyatt made these multi-colored smoke photos by doing just that!
photojojo:
Photo Idea: Use colored gel lenses and snooted flashes to capture these amazing shots of rainbow smoke!
Sean Wyatt made these multi-colored smoke photos by doing just that!
photojojo:
Photo Idea: Use colored gel lenses and snooted flashes to capture these amazing shots of rainbow smoke!
Sean Wyatt made these multi-colored smoke photos by doing just that!
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photojojo:

These colorful mazes aren’t illustrations or paintings - they’re photos shot through a microscope.
Fabian Oefner mixed watercolor and ferrofluid and placed it in an electromagnetic field to create patterns. It’s the iron in the ferrofluid that makes the black lines that separate the colors. 
photojojo:

These colorful mazes aren’t illustrations or paintings - they’re photos shot through a microscope.
Fabian Oefner mixed watercolor and ferrofluid and placed it in an electromagnetic field to create patterns. It’s the iron in the ferrofluid that makes the black lines that separate the colors. 
photojojo:

These colorful mazes aren’t illustrations or paintings - they’re photos shot through a microscope.
Fabian Oefner mixed watercolor and ferrofluid and placed it in an electromagnetic field to create patterns. It’s the iron in the ferrofluid that makes the black lines that separate the colors. 
photojojo:

These colorful mazes aren’t illustrations or paintings - they’re photos shot through a microscope.
Fabian Oefner mixed watercolor and ferrofluid and placed it in an electromagnetic field to create patterns. It’s the iron in the ferrofluid that makes the black lines that separate the colors.