Tag

Earth Sciences

Browsing

When Hurricane Sandy hit the northeastern United States in 2012, it left behind not just devastation but an enormous amount of debris β€” wood and timber washed ashore across miles of coastline. The Drift Relief project turned some of that wreckage into something beautiful: painted driftwood pieces sold to raise money for those who lost everything. One of the most honest examples of art as genuine community response we’ve seen β€” not symbolic, not performative, but actually useful.

1671712-inline-sandy-driftwood-96

A unique charity and beautiful art project, Drift Relief finds driftwood left behind from Hurricane Sandy, and paints the wood in lovely patterns and colors. The unique pieces are sold, and the proceeds go to benefit those who “lost it all” in the storm.

I’ve always loved painted driftwood, and even grew up with driftwood ‘snakes’ scattered throughout my home. But these pieces tell a story, and their cause is worth your dollars.

Via Drift Relief:Β Each piece of driftwood or broken boardwalk was collected in the aftermath of Sandy and is hand painted and labeled with the name of the beach where it was found.

Screen Shot 2013-01-29 at 12.15.23 PM

1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-94

1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-95 1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-97 1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-98 1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-99 1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-100 1671712-slide-sandy-driftwood-101 Screen Shot 2013-01-29 at 11.14.37 AM

1672110-slide-big-one

In a phenomenon that scientists still don’t quite understand, lightning is sometimes borne out of an active volcano when it erupts, with dramatic effect. On an island in southern Japan, one of Asia’s most active volcanos is providing an amazing show. Β Via FastCo Design:

1672110-slide-jp13-105d8 1672110-slide-jp13-089-5dii 1672110-slide-jp13-066d8det 1672110-slide-jp13-011-5dii

South African artist Aldo Pulella has an intriguing and inviting little world he calls Mammoth Falls, rendered in low poly form. I’d like to take a visit to this mountainous and scenic spot. Via Behance:

From the artist:
Mammoth Falls was an experiment of Atmospheric Art Direction,Β I have been wanting to play with for quite some time.
Taking the idea of low poly and executing a placeΒ that brought back an old feeling, a place I once visited. Then takingΒ that feeling and creating a ficticious placeΒ of my own.