Art appreciation
The camera now pans for a more dramatic effect
So there are relatively few forensic anthropologists in this state, and I am working with two of them on different aspects of some… things… that my museum really isn’t supposed to have. Neither of them knew I was working with the other one until I unthinkingly mentioned it this afternoon.
Holy cow. The last time I saw anything like this, it was because I asked a LiveJournal community moderator whether they had met a certain BNF, and it turned out they used to be co-moderators until a messy breakup. You’d think I just mentioned someone who ships a problematic OTP. I am fully expecting to be vagueblogged on the Smithsonian forum.
Fandom is as fandom does.
Happy Tuesday! Our team member used Ecoline and Kuretake brush pens to letter this quote about spring. Do you have a favorite spring flower?⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀
Check out all the products we used here: https://to.jetpens.com/2PeHQJW
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Clickable link in Instagram profile!
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#jetpens #instajetpens #jetpensart #ecoline #kuretake #kuretakezig #watercolorbrushpen #brushpen #brushpenlettering #lettering #spring #stationery #stationerylove
https://www.instagram.com/p/BwVV4smlhov/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=jmk0o9hj59so
The lullaby is called Sleep So Sweet! :)
I hope it will be included in the soundtrack. (Also I may or may not have it on repeat right now. I admit nothing.)
New art from NASA imagines a rosy but unrealistic future of canines on the distant planet.
Recently, NASA released colorful, dreamy illustrations depicting an imagined future in which human beings have made it to other worlds. A curly-haired astronaut floats inside a lunar space station, with the crater-pocked moon behind her. A lunar explorer steadies a camera on a tripod to photograph Earth in the distance. And an astronaut stands on the dunes of Mars with her hands in the pockets of her spacesuit, a dog at her side.
Wait, a dog?
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Pterocarpus Angolensis is a tree native to South Africa. It’s also commonly known as the bloodwood tree due to the fact that when it’s chopped or damaged, a deep red sap which looks eerily similar to blood, seeps from the tree. In fact, the purpose of the sap is to coagulate and seal the wound to promote healing, much like blood.