Melissa Cooke, Skull Face, graphite on paper, 49” x 38”
via beautifuldecay
Melissa Cooke, Skull Face, graphite on paper, 49” x 38”
via beautifuldecay
During a game of ‘Win, Lose, or Draw,’ Dwayne Carter, Jr. (as he was known back then) was dragged into a dark closet by a 13-year-old girl. The rest is history.
Some of you may know, I’m a big fan of R&B, but a huge fan of The Dream and love all his work. So I decided I wanted to do a mix of everything he’s done, after compiling a good amount of songs he’s produced, sang on, Remixed, etc, I realized I had so much of his work that I decided to turn this into a 3 part mix. Each mix will each be a little different, but much alike all The Dream’s tune, the main theme is always Love. Here’s Part I.
The lone gleaming, plastic jewel amongst organic decay, the rocker needed no friends.
(Dwell)
Pretty much the only forms of Western literature that don’t use hyphenation are children’s books and websites. Until now. Yesterday’s release of Firefox 6 and last month’s release of Safari 5.1 on OS X Lion mean that two browsers now support CSS 3 hyphenation.
Turning on hyphenation is…
remy:
[Please note that this post is intentionally unedited. It’s a raw rant that would probably go down better in a pub. Since we’re not in a pub, this medium will have to do.]
So, go read this equally link baiting article on why you should hold off HTML5. Then come back and let’s talk.
I’ll say…
Just as New York Times public editor Arthur S. Brisbane is concerned whether his newspaper should print lies or the truth, we here at V.F. looking for reader input on whether and when Vanity Fair should spell “words” correctly in the stories we publish.
One example: the word “maintenance” seems like it should only have one “a” in it. It should be “maintenence,” right? But it’s not. So is it our job as reporters and editors to spell it correctly?
holy shit, man.
as if you needed more reasons why the Entry and MPLS are awesome.
(Source: party-wok)