intro



Reblogged from phosphenism
Reblogged from derangedbutterfly
derangedbutterfly:

Dublin - Trinity College Library by Irish Welcome Tours on Flickr.
Aside from being absolutely gorgeous, with two story dark wooden arches, this is also the largest library in all of Ireland. It serves as the country’s copyright library, where a copy of all new books and periodicals must be sent when they apply for copyright protection. The library is also home to the famous Book of Kells, an illuminated manuscript created by Celtic monks around the year 800.

derangedbutterfly:

Dublin - Trinity College Library by Irish Welcome Tours on Flickr.

Aside from being absolutely gorgeous, with two story dark wooden arches, this is also the largest library in all of Ireland. It serves as the country’s copyright library, where a copy of all new books and periodicals must be sent when they apply for copyright protection. The library is also home to the famous Book of Kells, an illuminated manuscript created by Celtic monks around the year 800.

Reblogged from beconinriot
beconinriot:

Moon Bridge in Taiwan by bbe022001 

beconinriot:

Moon Bridge in Taiwan by bbe022001 

Reblogged from cjwho
cjwho:

Swimming pool with New York skyline, Mumbai
The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.
It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.
The idea was conceived by advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, who were commissioned by banking giant HSBC to promote its £50million project tackling climate change.
The Ogilvy team came up with an innovative way to show the adverse impact of global climate change. They glued an aerial view of a city to the base of a swimming pool. When the pool was filled with water, it gave a shocking effect akin to a city submerged in water. The visual of a sunken city shocked swimmers and onlookers, driving home the impact of global warming, and how it could destroy our world someday.
http://www.ogilvy.com

cjwho:

Swimming pool with New York skyline, Mumbai

The eye-catching swimming pool in Mumbai, India, has been built to raise awareness about the threat of sea level rises as a result of global warming.

It was constructed by attaching a giant aerial photograph of the New York City skyline to the floor of the pool.

The idea was conceived by advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, who were commissioned by banking giant HSBC to promote its £50million project tackling climate change.

The Ogilvy team came up with an innovative way to show the adverse impact of global climate change. They glued an aerial view of a city to the base of a swimming pool.
When the pool was filled with water, it gave a shocking effect akin to a city submerged in water. The visual of a sunken city shocked swimmers and onlookers, driving home the impact of global warming, and how it could destroy our world someday.

http://www.ogilvy.com

Reblogged from followitblind
followitblind:

The High Line

followitblind:

The High Line

Reblogged from allthingseurope
allthingseurope:

France: Le Mont-Saint-Michel (by mau_tweety)

allthingseurope:

France: Le Mont-Saint-Michel (by mau_tweety)