(Source: stonersrules)

(Reblogged from capistrate-me)
(Reblogged from ahemeverybodysouttogetme)

(Source: earthen-origins)

(Reblogged from asoulsurrender)
nectars:

actual representation of me sleeping

nectars:

actual representation of me sleeping

(Source: yossarian-lives)

(Reblogged from kellsthings)
(Reblogged from assrose)

(Source: ideten)

(Reblogged from the-star-stuff)
(Reblogged from thewanderslut)

(Source: youngmunchkin)

(Reblogged from volatilevolpe)
(Reblogged from rasta-far-eye-deactivated201305)

harpollo:

ridingwithstrangers:

Architectural Density in Hong Kong

With seven million people, Hong Kong is the 4th most densely populated places in the world. However, plain numbers never tell the full story. In his ‘Architecture of Density’ photo series, German photographer Michael Wolf explores the jaw-dropping urban landscapes of Hong Kong. He rids his photographs of any context, removing any sky or horizon line from the frame and flattening the space until it becomes a relentless abstraction of urban expansion, with no escape for the viewer’s eye. Infinite and haunting.

Editor’s Note: Co-signed.

incredible

(Reblogged from fuckyeahtrippyimages)
(Reblogged from aadumb)
(Reblogged from crookedindifference)

(Source: brandyalexanders)

(Reblogged from the-starkster)

fuckyeahfluiddynamics:

Water droplet art celebrates the infinite forms created from the impact of drops with a pool and rebounding jets. It’s a still life captured from split second interactions between inertia, momentum, and surface tension. These examples from photographer Markus Reugels are among some of the most complex shapes I’ve seen captured. Be sure to check out his website for more beautiful examples of liquids frozen in time. (Photo credits: Markus Reugels; via Photigy)

(Reblogged from fuckyeahfluiddynamics)
(Reblogged from fuckyeahdementia)