
Glasgow, Ellen Anderson Gholson. Phases of an Inferior Planet. New York and London, Harper & Brothers, 1898.
via: The Internet Archive

Glasgow, Ellen Anderson Gholson. Phases of an Inferior Planet. New York and London, Harper & Brothers, 1898.
via: The Internet Archive
A book using fairy stories to introduce children to the branches of science.
via: The Internet Archive
Nightjar is here to share her beautiful, monthly photos of the light in her world.
I thought I will finish shaping the handle today. Instead, I have to start all over again – the piece of cherrywood that I used had some deep cracks (they were not on the outside) that got too wide and too visible in addition to two unseemly knots. The knots themselves could be seen as a part of the wood, but the cracks kill it definitively.
I have just spent some 2 hours shaping a piece of firewood.
Last year I have shown you bright yellow crab spider who was munching on bees. This year I did not see a grown-up one, only this one little baby. Still white, slightly translucent and tiny, about the size of a pinhead. Sorry for a bit blurry pictures, but the little bugger did not stop, it kept wandering about and performing strange gymnastics. And I have forgotten to take my monopod with me, so this is shot completely freehand.
via: The Internet Archive
What I find the most interesting about his video is the realization that our modern perceptions of what is and is not beautiful are heavily skewed towards unreasonable and sometimes unachievable perfection. Sometimes perfection that you can only evaluate up so close, that you need a magnifying glass and calipers.
I blame the industrial revolution and mass-produced machined goods.

Julius M. Price. My Bohemian Days in Paris. Cover art and included drawings by the author. Philadelphia, D. McKay, 1913.
via: The Internet Archive

Louise Chandler Moulton. In the Garden of Dreams: Lyrics and Sonnets. Boston, Roberts Brothers, 1890.
Cover Photo via: Liveinternet.ru
Available to read at The Internet Archive
A lovely blue flower courtesy of Avalus who says,
A beautiful Cornflower, next to a field of wheat. Since last year, farmers are encouraged to leave the borders of their fields unplowed and many plants have found new niches. I have cycled this road for over 7 years and these are the first cornflowers I have seen there. I hope next year, there will be more.
