
(Source: scumbagcrew, via doc-martians)

(Source: scumbagcrew, via doc-martians)

(Source: j-stin, via senseibates)
(Source: fuckyeahtattoos, via madeofchemicals)
Hunter S. Thompson photographed March 12, 1974 on the beach of Cozumel, Mexico by Al Satterwhite.
(Source: mattybing1025)
(via legendofmanda)
Peter Fuss had the idea to place the station in Gdansk in Poland these posters. With a message of peace, these posters are a reminder not to think with stereotypes, and the need to step back from what we hear.
—William S. Burroughs, Queer (via honeyforthehomeless)
At a quick glance these colorful photographs by Milwaukee-based photographed Jack Long might pass as some kind of strange exotic flowers, but a squint of the eyes later reveals they are actually high speed photographs of colored water, captured in a way to mimic the shape of blooms, leaves, and even pots.
Each photograph from Long’s Vessels and Blooms series is captured in a stunningly precise take that took months of trial and error to perfect. Like a mad scientist he creates cocktails of dyes, thickeners, and pigments for each component of the shot and then blasts them through a customized mechanism before snapping a perfectly timed capture. “This series was a culmination of months of planning and testing. Hundreds of captures are made in testing and then many more during the actual final capture stage. A very few stand out as being the best,” he says. You can see much more of his work on Flickr and 500px. (via oddity central) (by Christopher)
(via theastonishingpost)

(Source: wallflower-musings, via pigyouth)
—William S. Burroughs, Letters to Allen Ginsberg: 1953-1957 (via honeyforthehomeless)
(via whatokay)
“here’s looking at you, kid” by anatol knotek

(Source: thebookslut, via lionman)