expose-the-light:

Photographer Loves Math, Graphs Her Images

Here are some of the pictures the photographer named Nikki Graziano have captured. Graziano, is a math and photography student at Rochester Institute of Technology, she overlays graphs and their corresponding equations onto her carefully composed photos.

    “I wanted to create something that could communicate how awesome math is, to everyone,” she says.

Graziano doesn’t go out looking for a specific function but lets one find her instead. Once she’s got an image she likes, Graziano whips up the numbers and tweaks the function until the graph it describes aligns perfectly with the photograph. See more of her Found Functions series at Nikkigraziano.com.

(via taikoturtle)

yes, please.
marissamerie:

yes, please.

marissamerie:

sigh

sigh

(Source: tw0thousandmiles)

lol
most-awkward-moments:

Submitted by cobainqueen

lol

most-awkward-moments:

Submitted by cobainqueen

sooo cool
cakeninjak:

ruineshumaines:

 A walkable rollercoaster sculpture in Duisburg, Germany designed by Heike Mutter and Ulrich Genth. (via Tiger & Turtle aktuell)

WHAT THE SHIT WE NEED THIS IN AMERICA.

sooo cool

cakeninjak:

ruineshumaines:

 A walkable rollercoaster sculpture in Duisburg, Germany designed by Heike Mutter and Ulrich Genth. (via Tiger & Turtle aktuell)

WHAT THE SHIT WE NEED THIS IN AMERICA.

i like

brain-food:

Stacking Green House. Saigon, Vietnam. 

The architects at Vo Trong Nghia Co., ltd. completed a modern residence in Saigon, Vietnam, for a thirty-years-old couple and their mother, in the shape of a tube, 4m wide and 20m high. Entitled “Stacking Green“, it stands out due to its original facades, featuring a large number of terraces, each adorned with flower pots. Here is more from the architects: “The front and back façades are entirely composed of layers of concrete planters cantilevered from two side walls.
 
The house structure is a RC frame structure widely used in Vietnam. The partition walls are very few in order to keep interior fluency and view of green façades from every point of the house. Natural ventilation through the façades and 2 top-lights allow this house to save a big energy in a harsh climate in Saigon. Concerning these ecological approaches, we referred a lot to the bioclimatic principles of traditional Vietnamese courtyard house“”. The green façades and roof top garden shelter the family from polution, noise and sunlight.

(via kixtine)

:]

:]

(Source: pokec0re, via kixtine)

most-awkward-moments:

the cat… LOL

most-awkward-moments:

the cat… LOL