Okenite and Gyrolite - Pune (Poonah), Maharashtra, India
RIP
RIP André Courrèges. (1923-2016)
RIP
RIP André Courrèges. (1923-2016)
desire II
"A Beautiful Darkness"
Ruth Hogben/ Gareth Pugh
desire
Pierre Cardin ski ensemble , 1970
blancsblancsblancs
Unattributed
Thus far
Kinga Kuk by Sarah Moon _ Crystallized Magazine # 14, June 2010
2016 →
Wishing everyone a remarkable and ecstatic adventure this year!
Phantom Smoky Amethyst - Goboboseb Mtns, Brandberg Region, Namibia
Solstice 2015 →
Bear on a snow- covered pine tree
Keisai Eisen
woodblock print circa 1840
Three things:
1. Independent creative consultant, practitioner and conspirator.
2. Eternally devoted classical Pilates student and instructor trainee.
3. Vocation: honoring, embodying and documenting the poetry of life.
Magnificent
Michele Lamy by Mario Sorrenti
Annette Messager. Mes voeux sous filet, 1997
Isn't it grand... →
"All perfectly reasonable interpretations of love begetting love begetting love, which is why we were all gathered around my table that night, weren’t we? Because real love, once blossomed, never disappears. It may get lost with a piece of paper, or transform into art, books or children, or trigger another couple’s union while failing to cement your own.
But it’s always there, lying in wait for a ray of sun, pushing through thawing soil, insisting upon its rightful existence in our hearts and on earth."
Deborah Copaken
Le grand saut
©imagemm
©Marisa Marko
Eva & McQueen →
Alexander McQueen AW14 featured Vogue Japan
worldmcqueen
Gia →
Photographer:
Francesco Scavullo
Dame Vivienne →
Dame Vivienne Westwood, 74, heading to David Cameron's house, in a tank, in anti-fracking protest. September 11th, 2015. Photo Leon Neal.
©Marisa Marko ©imagemm
2015
12
"On any one of these trips into the twilight, the rate of new-species discovery can top 10 per hour. You can imagine why a diver might be tempted to stay as long as possible, to linger and simply take in this cold, bizarre, light-starved world. But there are other forces at work, namely the desperate need to manage risk in this inherently risky endeavor and to keep decompression time down to a reasonable number of hours.
There’s a lot more to the risks of deep diving than the obvious distance it puts between the diver and that unlimited supply of air at the surface. The pressure that goes hand in hand with depth does bizarre things to one’s physiology, particularly in relation to the air we breathe. Every 33 feet of depth stacks one whole atmosphere’s worth of pressure on top of a diver. That pressure compresses everything, gases in particular—so much so that a lungful of air at 500 feet contains 12 times as many molecules as the same breath at the surface. That’s 12 times the number of molecules pushing into a diver’s tissues and being absorbed by the blood, which is almost exactly 12 times too many.
At depth, the 21-percent concentration of life-giving oxygen we breathe on land quickly becomes toxic and seizure-inducing. The other chief component of air, nitrogen, starts to have a narcotic effect somewhere beyond about 90 feet. Seizures and narcosis are two conditions you most definitely do not want hundreds of feet underwater. To prevent both, the divers use an advanced breathing system that dilutes the standard percentages of oxygen and nitrogen with helium, an inert gas that has none of the toxicity and narcotic effects of the other two gases. This closed-circuit system, known as a “rebreather,” also scrubs carbon dioxide from air the diver exhales and recycles oxygen, which allows for longer dive times. A sophisticated onboard computer monitors the mix of gases in real-time and meters out just enough oxygen to keep a diver conscious, clear-headed, and seizure-free."
Steven Bedard is Senior Science Editor at the Califiornia Academy of Sciences.
July
©imagemm