Valentina Valor
Valentina Valor
Asiii  juega , cuchito, cuchito
la vola futurista ….
Aqui estamos bien los 2, lechandote lemenooo :*
pal juanvi <3
Cuchitos 
Tengo un Gatito muy regaloncito <3
dibujar dibujar y ams dibujar
n.n
ZoomInfo
jackmrhughes:

Drink Awareness // Systembolaget 
Two illustrations for Sweden’s government owned liquor store Systembolaget. The campaign was for drink awareness in the summer and played on two Swedish words that evidently had something to do with driving and a harbour … the pun was completely lost to me, apparently it’s a Swedish thing. Those clever Swedes.   

Ir lejos, por unos tiempos largos
jackmrhughes:

Drink Awareness // Systembolaget 
Two illustrations for Sweden’s government owned liquor store Systembolaget. The campaign was for drink awareness in the summer and played on two Swedish words that evidently had something to do with driving and a harbour … the pun was completely lost to me, apparently it’s a Swedish thing. Those clever Swedes.   

Ir lejos, por unos tiempos largos
ZoomInfo
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
staceythinx:

Tom Beddard (aka subblue) has been responsible for some of the most fascinating work being done with fractals. His totally mesmerizing video of fractal shapes morphing into one another was one of the first things I posted on this blog. 
In his series Fabergé Fractals he has created digitally generated objects with designs as intricate as the eggs they’re named after. 
Beddard on his work:

The 3D fractals are generated by iterative formulas whereby the output of one iteration forms the input for the next. The formulas effectively fold, scale, rotate or flip space. They are truly fractal in the fact that more and more detail can be revealed the closer to the surface you travel.
The fascinating aspect is where combinations of parameters can combine to create structural “resonances” of extraordinary detail and beauty—sometimes naturally organic and other times perfectly geometric. But then like a chaotic system it can completely disappear with the smallest perturbation.
fungiandflora:

Laetiporus cincinnatus. So, so beautiful.