I don’t won’t garden, but I found the art work in this video quite appealing (and I love the bees).

I don’t won’t garden, but I found the art work in this video quite appealing (and I love the bees).

“Earlier this year, photographer Mathieu Stern discovered a time capsule dating back to the early 1900s in his family home. The 120-year-old box held a little girl’s cherished possessions, including a paper doll, seashell, and two glass plate negatives. Stern decided to develop the photographs using Cyanotype, one of the earliest printing processes that was prevalent well into the 20th century, and revealed images of the child’s pets. The photographer chronicled the entire endeavor in a video, which you can find on his YouTube and Instagram.”


. . . but I think that one about the Brussels sprouts is really true.


Inspired by a fascination with old, illustrated medical and other scientific textbooks, artist Michele Volpi turned his skills to the medium of tattooing. Here are some examples of finely detailed designs.




From this is colossal