Life-long learner: I'm always looking for inspiration.
43 stories
·
0 followers

The Carpenter's

1 Comment
I love getting to take pictures of such cool people. I especially love getting to see how they feel about each other through the lens. They make my job so easy!
























Read the whole story
kbeddes
3599 days ago
reply
My beautiful sis and bro-in-law!
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete

Infant self-rescue in water

1 Comment and 4 Shares

Baby float

The NY Times has a bunch of photos by Seth Casteel of babies undergoing infant survival swim training.

Zoe was being introduced to "self-rescue," in which babies are taught to hold their breath underwater, kick their feet, turn over to float on their backs and rest until help arrives.

The self-rescue idea is pretty amazing. You take kids who can't talk and can barely walk and teach them how to float on their backs. I didn't really believe it until I saw it:

Bonus summer PSA: drowning doesn't look like drowning.

Tags: photography   Seth Casteel   video
Read the whole story
kbeddes
3607 days ago
reply
Very cool idea, teaching babies to help themselves in the water.
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete

The scars of war

1 Comment and 2 Shares

Speaking of WWI, the landscape of the Western Front in Europe still shows the scars from the war 100 years on.

WWI trenches today

Tags: photography   war   WWI
Read the whole story
kbeddes
3628 days ago
reply
Sad: Physical scars from WWI still remain, 100 years later.
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete

Members of the Washington Ballet Demonstrate their Most Difficult Dance Moves in Slow Motion

1 Comment

Members of the Washington Ballet Demonstrate their Most Difficult Dance Moves in Slow Motion slow motion dancing ballet

In this video from the Washington Post, several members of the Washington Ballet demonstrate their most challenging moves. The points of peak action were shot with a high speed camera resulting in some impressive slow motion footage as each dancer seems to completely defy physics. (via Laughing Squid, The Kid Should See This)

Read the whole story
kbeddes
3633 days ago
reply
Pretty cool slo-mo dance moves!
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen

1 Comment

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

The Mini Book of Major Events by Evan Lorenzen illustration books

Trying to compress the history of Earth into a single book is an especially daunting task, the difficulty is compounded when the book you’re writing is the size of a nickel and is limited to just a few pages. Oh, and it needs lots of pictures. Lucky for us, illustrator Evan Lorenzen was up to the task and identified a few pivitol moments in history which he turned into this extremely tiny hand-bound book. You can see more of his miniature books over on his Tumblr. (via F*ck Yeah Book Arts)

Read the whole story
kbeddes
3642 days ago
reply
WANT!
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison

1 Comment

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Galerie L.J.

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Galerie L.J.

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Arrested Motion

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Arrested Motion

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Arrested Motion

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Arrested Motion

Tattooed Porcelain Figures by Jessica Harrison tattoos sculpture porcelain
Courtesy Arrested Motion

As part of a new body of sculptural work, artist Jessica Harrison has created a series of delicate porcelain figurines depicting idealized women in ball gowns, with one glaring difference from the collectibles found in your grandmother’s curio: each sculpture is covered neck to wrist in ornate sailor tattoos. This juxtaposition is not unfamiliar territory for Harrison who has created other, much more macabre figures, in the past. The Scotland-based artst recently completed a practice-led PhD funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, where she researched the relationship between interior and exterior spaces of the body, an area of study that is directly reflected in her artwork. Via her artist statement:

Harrison proposes a multi-directional and pervasive model of skin as a space in which body and world mingle. Working with this moving space between artist/maker and viewer, she draws on the active body in both making and interpreting sculpture to unravel imaginative touch and proprioceptive sensation in sculptural practice. In this way, Harrison re-describes the body in sculpture through the skin, offering an alternative way of thinking about the body beyond a binary tradition of inside and outside.

The pieces shown above, along with several others, will be on view at Galerie L.J. as part of her first solo show in Paris titled FLASH, beginning May 15, 2014. (via Arrested Motion I Need a Guide, This Isn’t Happiness)

Read the whole story
kbeddes
3642 days ago
reply
This is so neat!
Provo, Utah
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories