Tuesday, September 14, 2010

ATM Graffiti Prints | Graffiti art pictures around us

A collection of some of the coolest ATM graffiti I could find.































Graffiti art paints comes alive







Graffiti art paints comes alive

18 Nature Places to Feel Dwarfed | Real Photography



1. Uluru, Australia
The massive rock — a.k.a. Ayers Rock — is climbed by 250 every day, despite pleas from local indigenous groups to refrain from doing so.


2. Diving with whale sharks
The whale shark is the world’s largest fish species and can grow to be longer than 40 feet. This shot was taken off Christmas Island, Australia, in January 2005.


3. Cotopaxi, Ecuador
This volcano just south of Quito reaches an elevation of 5,897m (19,347ft) — often higher than the clouds.


4. Redwood country, California
Taken in Stout Grove, Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park


5. Sea Kayaking, solo
Big water, small boat. Shot taken walking the Southwest Coast Path from Land’s End to Plymouth, England.




6. Great Ocean Road, Australia
The coast along one of the world’s most spectacular roads is also good for a walk.


7. Ponoras Cave, Romania
Things can get large underground too. Here, spelunkers from CSA explore “Mammoth Hall” in Romania’s Transylvania region. The light trail was produced by a fast-moving caver with a headlamp.


8. Snowfields, Rocky Mountains
This is no photoshop. It’s Matador senior editor David Miller getting in some late-season turns in Rocky Mountain National Park.


9. Desert, southern Peru
Sand accumulates into massive dunes in one of the driest deserts on Earth. Notice the city of Ica, Peru, in the distance — also dwarfed.


10. Camping under the stars
So many stars. And camping the best way to let them overwhelm you. This shot was taken near Maupin, Oregon.


11. Mount Bromo, Indonesia
This very active Javanese volcano attracts lots of tiny visitors up to its steaming rim.

12. Yosemite National Park, California


13. Antarctica
Travelers to Antarctica report losing all sense of distance — the geographic scale is so immense and the ice fields so flat and white. This is Lake Fryxell.


14. Preikestolen, Norway
This rock has a great view of Lysefjorden and is a good place to get close to the edge.


15. Mont Blanc, France
Europe’s tallest mountain tops out at 4,810m (15,782ft)


16. Salar de Uyuni, Bolivia
This salt plain is the world’s largest and traps rainwater during wet winter months, creating a tripped-out sky mirror.


17. On a cliff ascent
This one happens to be the curved limestone face of Malham Cove, North Yorkshire, England.


18. Iguazu Falls, Brazil
The majority of the falls lies in Argentina, but according to the photographer, “the great thing about the Brazilian side of Iguazu is that there are no limits on taking pictures at any time of day….(unlike the Argentinian side).”

10 Beautiful Islands | Tropical islands pictures

1. Maldives
2. Auckland Islands, New Zealand
3. Aldabra Atoll, the Seychelles
4. Tetepare Island, the Solomon Islands
5. Rock Islands, Palau (Chelbacheb)
6. Cocos Island, Costa Rica
7. Phoenix Islands, Kiribati
8. Angthon National Marine Park, Thailand
9. Mamanuca Islands, Fiji
10. Ball's Pyramid

Monday, September 13, 2010

Joey Chestnut becomes burrito eating crown



Competitive eater Joey Chestnut is now king of the burrito.

Chestnut, also known as "Jaws," downed 47 burritos in 10 minutes at the New Mexico State Fair in Albuquerque on Saturday, beating the previous record of 33 1/2.

Known for his hot-dog eating, Chestnut won the annual July Fourth hot dog eating contest at New York's Coney Island for the fourth year in a row this summer.

Chestnut, of San Jose, Calif., won $1,500 for the feat in New Mexico Saturday. The burritos in the Garcia's World Burrito Eating Championship were stuffed with beef, beans and the state's famous green chile.

The event is sanctioned by the Major League Eating & International Federation of Competitive Eating, the world body that oversees all international professional eating contests.

The Rubber House



The Rubber House by Zeinstra van Gelderen architecten have designed this one-man pavilion made entirely of rubber.

The Rubber Pavilion is entered though a slit and has a bench in one wall and a window frame, which cannot be seen through, in another.

The house is an amber-coloured rectangular monolith (outside dimensions 1,5x 1,5 x 2,3 m) in which an egg shaped interior seems to be carved out. One wall offers a small bench and another a window-frame with no view. The entrance is nothing more than a vertical cut in a third wall. The whole house, including bench and window-frame, is made out of poured in place urethane resin.

Rubber House by Zeinstra van Gelderen architecten

Source : Dezeen