Showing posts with label submarine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label submarine. Show all posts

Lost World Fairs



Microsoft has a new site called Lost World Fairs to show off fancy fonts available in its latest version of Explorer. Right now, there are three fairs: El Dorado by Naz Hamid, Atlantis by Frank Chimero, and the Moon by Jason Santa Maria.

Atlantis is particularly fun to explore, and I took the liberty of cropping it into several widescreen desktop wallpapers (what you see below is probably roughly half of Atlantis):









*Buy World's Fair posters at eBay.

Submarines rotting on a beach in Scotland




Aberlady submarines:
The submarines are XT-Craft, training versions of the X-Craft that attacked the Tirpitz in 1942. In 1946 two of these vessels were towed to Aberlady Bay and moored to a large concrete block, then used as target practice and gun tests by RAF aircraft. Afterwards their badly damaged remains were simply left to rot.
Via.

Did you ever think you'd want to buy a poster for Innerspace?








Posters by Brandon Schaefer for Innerspace, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Murder by Death (which I watched until I knew it by heart), The Goblet of Fire, Ghostbusters, and Blade Runner. So many more on display at his site. Alas, I saw no purchasing information.

Oh, and in case you were wondering:





Actually it would be quite a conversation piece to have all three of those up in your office.

*Previously: The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou...in Lego.

*Buy Polish movie posters at eBay.

Poster for Fathoms (link roundup)



Poster for the shirt film "Fathoms." This website features concept art for the project.

And a few more links:

1. Obama's top science adviser advocated the "de-development" of the industrialized world.

2. Apparently, it's common for magazine/newspaper editors to "know what they want the story to look like, right down to the quotes, before they even assign it to a writer."

3. Photo gallery from a Katamari Damacy-themed wedding.

*Previously: Victorian submarines.

*Buy submarine toys at eBay.

Ganesha, Mecha-Submarine t-shirt designs

Two Threadless designs that caught my eye:


"Ganesh will get you there" by Mike Reisel. If you'd like the chance to buy it, vote by clicking on the voting widget:
Ganesh will get you there. - Threadless T-shirts, Nude No More



"Submarine Menagerie" t-shirt design by igo2cairo. If you'd like the chance to buy it, vote by clicking on the voting widget:
Submarine Menagerie - Threadless T-shirts, Nude No More

*Previously: Seahorse necklace.

*Find Ganesha statues at eBay.

Steampunk submarine (link roundup)



Steampunk submarine
by Alexander Jansson. Don't miss his "greenpunk" gallery. Via.

And a few more links:

1. Work in progress image of Molly Crabapple's heroes fighting the octopus of censorship.

2. Gallery of weapons prisoners have made. Via these sites.

3. "Three decades ago Mir-Hossein Mousavi was waging a terrorist war on the United States that included bloody attacks on the U.S. embassy and Marine Corps barracks in Beirut."

4. Rich Page got enough positive feedback on the Space Kook he drew for the Villains of Scooby Doo contest that he also drew The Creeper.

*Previously: Submarine being attacked by a tentacle monster Dunny.

*Buy submarine toys at eBay.

Weird animal costumes (link roundup)



Weird animal costumes spotted at Kid Acne's blog. which I was exploring because there's a set of blind box toys designed by Kid Acne going on sale at Kidrobot next month.

And a few more links:

1. Chinese citizen Shu Chun Teng studied fungus at Cornell in New York in 1923. He spent the next several years traveling through China collecting fungus specimens. When the Japanese invaded China in 1937, he arranged for the specimens to be smuggled to Cornell, where they've been kept ever since. Cornell is now giving them back. Via.

2. If you'd like someone to boo during the baseball season, you won't do much better than Gary Sheffield.

3. Japanese navy used a super powerful "bullhorn" to scare off Somali pirates.

4. During the 70's, America learned that the Soviets were using an underwater cable to send communications. The cable was in an area that was full of listening devices and that was frequently patrolled by Soviet ships. Nevertheless, the US sent a submarine into the area, which deposited a diver. The diver planted a device that wrapped around the cable and recorded the transmissions. It was even designed to fall off if the cable was raised. But the device could not transmit. So every so often, a diver had to return to retrieve it. The mission went great. And then the Soviets found about it... Via.

*Previously: Submarine, airship, and a giant tentacled monster.

*Buy submarine toys at eBay.