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Shinjuku
PIXII digital rangefinder with Leica 28mm f2.8 Elmarit lens (35mmc review)
Photographer: Ryotaro Enatsu / instagram
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st. mechtern // köln ehrenfeld
architects: rudolf & maria schwarz
completion: 1954
renovation: 1966/1984
window design by wilhelm buschulte
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Preben Fabricius & Jørgen Kastholm, Rosewood office chair, model FK 84
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Hans Vagt & Peter Bannert, Stereo Radio Pop 70, 1969-76. Blaupunkt Germany. Source
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Witches Sabbath, 1789, Francisco Goya
Medium: oil,canvas
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What parrot has green plumage, lives in the mountains, and is native to New Zealand? The Kea (Nestor notabilis)! This alpine parrot inhabits New Zealand’s South Island and is known for its intelligence and inquisitive personality. An opportunistic eater, the Kea’s diet depends on whatever is available at the moment—from berries, seeds, and flowers in the summer to garbage and animal carcasses in the winter. This bird is infamous among the region’s farmers, as it’s been known to attack sheep. Photo: Bernard Spragg, NZ https://www.instagram.com/p/CAjmOVvgJOO/?igshid=x6mrxshkqjo9
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Peter Alexander (American, 1939-2020), Java, 2004. Acrylic on panel, 30 x 33 in.
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dream

Braun Hifi wall unit, by Dieter Rams, 1980
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Not all Jays are blue—meet the Green Jay (Cyanocorax yncas). It’s native to parts of Central and South America, with a small population in southern Texas. In the tropics, this bird can be found in humid forests, where its green and yellow plumage camouflage it in the tree canopy. It forages for seeds, fruits, and arthropods. Photo: Félix Uribe https://www.instagram.com/p/CBUWTPTgZBZ/?igshid=1p8p0pkivn6p4
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804. Rural Studio /// Anderson and Ora Lee Harris House (Butterfly House) /// Mason’s Bend, Alabama, USA /// 1997
OfHouses guest curated by onSITE, part II. (Photos: �� Timothy Hursley. Source: Andrea Oppenheimer Dean, “Rural Studio: Samuel Mockbee and an Architecture of Decency", New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2002.)
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