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Design, Architecture, Photography & Urbanitas from NYC™
—B Dean Skibinski, Proprietor.
Skibinskipedia™ is the online wunderkammer of B Dean Skibinski, a graphic designer and writer based in New York City. Launched in 2010, it has since been a repository of inspirations and links related to design, architecture, art, film, literature, music, photography, and, of course, New York City. I take great care to either retain or add accurate attribution to each post, but if for some reason any citations are missing or incorrect, please don't hesitate to let me know. Additionally, if work I've featured is yours and you for some reason don't want it featured, I shall be happy to remove it upon your request. Please email or message me as you wish.
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Tags Space Science Cosmology The Sun Solar Flares NASA 13 March 2012
Source nasa.gov
PROJECT MERCURY, 1959
Tags Photography Color History America Project Mercury Mercury-Atlas 6 Space Technology Science NASA 1950s 1960s Ralph Morse
Reblogged from BlackBook Source plumpurple
Enceladus: Saturn’s Moon
Below a darkened Enceladus, a plume of water ice is back-lit in this view of one of Saturn’s most dramatic moons.
[Image Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Space Science Institute]
Angry Sun Erupting
Image Credit & Copyright: Alan Friedman (Averted Imagination)
Explanation: It’s one of the baddest sunspot regions in years. Active Region 1429 may not only look, to some, like an angry bird — it has thrown off some of the most powerful flares and coronal mass ejections of the current solar cycle. The extended plumes from these explosions have even rained particles on the Earth’s magnetosphere that have resulted in colorful auroras. Pictured above, AR 1429 was captured in great detail in the Sun’s chromosphere three days ago by isolating a color of light emitted primarily by hydrogen. The resulting image is shown in inverted false color with dark regions being the brightest and hottest. Giant magnetically-channeled tubes of hot gas, some longer than the Earth, are known as spicules and can be seen carpeting the chromosphere. The light tendril just above AR 1429 is a cool filament hovering just over the active sunspot region. As solar maximum nears in the next few years, the increasingly wound and twisted magnetic field of the Sun may create even more furious active regions that chirp even more energetic puffs of solar plasma into our Solar System. (via APOD: 2012 March 14 - Angry Sun Erupting)
Tags Space Science Cosmology The Sun Alan Friedman
Reblogged from It's Full of Stars Source apod.nasa.gov
Will Burtin | Scope Magazine Cover for Upjohn | 1951
It is convenient to say, “I don’t have time to learn this,” and fall back to the old bag of design tricks. The result is a perfectly adequate layout. But this is not only a disservice to the client; it is a lost opportunity to dig into a subject deeply. Good design takes time, not because designers like to move a 7 point line of Garamond back and forth 1 pica. It takes time to learn, digest, and re-articulate with intelligence and craft.
From the stunning array of Burtin’s work (courtesy of the Lou Danziger Collection) at AdamsMorioka.
Waterway to Orbit
Credit & Copyright: James Vernacotola
The 32nd shuttle mission to the International Space Station, STS-130, left planet Earth on February 8, 2010. Its early morning launch to orbit from Kennedy Space Center’s pad 39A followed the long, graceful, eastward arc seen in this 2 minute time exposure.
Tags Photography Color Space Space Shuttle Science Technology NASA STS-130
Reblogged from It's Full of Stars Source ikenbot
Notes