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#graphie
ungrandvide · 23 days
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Roni Horn
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abridurif · 2 years
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Jacques Villeglé, Éclatements Lacérations Graffiti, 1978
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wanderingokali · 5 months
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A species of blep from cold steppes. Like most species of furred tetrapods, it keeps its young in a pouch for months until they are hardy enough to run about and eat solid food. It eats lichens, roots and mosses primarily, but is an opportunistic scavenger if those prove scarce. It lives in groups of variable sizes, with complex familial dynamics, but these groups can be spread out over great distances; they communicate by loud bellows that cover long distances despite great winds.
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nordinor · 1 year
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strathshepard · 4 months
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Graphis special issue on Japan, 1968
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nobrashfestivity · 8 months
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Toshihiro Katayama, from Graphis, 1966
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70sscifiart · 1 year
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1970 cover to design magazine Graphis, issue 148. Designed by Fritz Gottschalk
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asiangirls-sexy · 8 months
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Model Name - Miho Imamura / 今村美穂
Original Photo Source - Graphis.ne.jp
(Photo is AI-Enhanced & Upscaled)
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lichenaday · 1 month
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Graphis librata
This script lichen has a white to creamy yellow crustose thallus. It has lirellate apothecia, which means the apothecia are longer than wide, with a narrow, slit-like opening. They are black, slightly curved, and typically unbranched. These apothecia produce hyaline (clear) 5-9 septate (transversely segmented) spores, which are like the babies of the mycobiont that are ejected and sent off into nature to make it on their own. G. librata grows on the smooth bark of deciduous trees and occasionally on rock in tropical regions.
images: source | source | source
info: source
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swim-forthemusic · 3 months
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picspams: Princess Kida (Atlantis: The Lost Empire, 2001)
We are not thriving. True, our people live, but our culture is dying. We are like a stone the ocean beats against. With each passing year a little more of us is worn away.
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xedgehog · 7 months
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2023.09.29 Jewel Staite.  New Photomanipulation.  I tried to match the background to her suit.
Text and image(s) (unless otherwise specified) ©Copyright 2023 Rob Bryan.  "No copyright/intellectual property infringement intended." (Fair use is claimed.  Original photo, art or character rights are reserved, & belong to their respective owners.) Credit is given where possible.  Sharing permitted with credit line. Documented permission is required for commercial use.
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onenicebugperday · 6 months
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hii sorry to randomly come in asks like this i didnt know who to talk to about this.
Recently ive seen a bunch of content from americans about spotted lanterflies and maybe its just me but it seems a lot like huh. Like people are just jumping at the opportunity to have a valid reason to violently kill an insect? like yes it's invasive and from what i've seen, really destructive, but it just feels like all bug hating people jumped on the ship of killing them just for cruelty's sake :/ idk it's just vibes and feelings but i wondered if anyone else felt the same way.
I have definitely seen people be very gleeful about it, which I personally find pretty distasteful. Not to mention telling random people (who cannot accurately ID most bugs to start with) to kill them is not going to stop their spread.
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wanderingokali · 2 months
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These small kullau are part of a species that lives in large groups, up to thousands of individuals, who fly together throughout the sky to catch small flying bugs that they eat.
They tend to favor wetlands to nest; the abundance of their prey makes it ideal for them. During the period when they raise their young, their fluffy whiskers get even fuller, and those catch and trap extra bugs in them, which helps them get extra food to their babies.
Outside of those periods, a flock travels here and there, mostly following ideal weathers for hunting in the sky. Due to this, seeing them is often a good sign that the next few days will be warm and sunny.
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colinarcartperson · 2 years
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For the prompt “Trick Roping”
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nobrashfestivity · 8 months
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Edvard Munch, the cover of Graphis 05-06, 1945
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fyeahweeekly · 12 days
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ZOA ♡
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