Great inspiration, but the makeup was all done in Photoshop, and not very well. :\
January 25 2012 · 1:16am

Great inspiration, but the makeup was all done in Photoshop, and not very well. :\

(Source: , via ladypandacat)

logotv:

Vanessa DuJour


Ru, I love you, but who the heck do you have working in your graphics department? They did a pretty poor job of copying that shoulder pouf to the hip if I spotted it within 2 seconds and without looking at the full-size wallpaper.
August 2 2011 · 3:46pm

logotv:

Vanessa DuJour

Ru, I love you, but who the heck do you have working in your graphics department? They did a pretty poor job of copying that shoulder pouf to the hip if I spotted it within 2 seconds and without looking at the full-size wallpaper.

(via fuckyeahrupaulsdragrace)

practicalhearts:

I know I wasn’t the first person to have a Tumblr to devoted to Adam Lambert, but ever since I made mine, people have been creating their own and taking pictures I may have made for my website, not just pictures I found online. It’s really upsetting.

Right-click prevention isn’t actually HTML, but scripting, usually something like JavaScript. Also, it doesn’t work - there’s more than one way to get around it. If someone wants an image, there is almost always a way to get it in less than 20 seconds (this coming from someone who can get the photo off of one of those no-reblogging, no-saving flickr pages in less than 5).

But back on topic, I do think it’s rude to just be taking the photos like that. I’ve always viewed it as not necessarily being a matter of deserving credit for the image, but deserving some recognition for the time spent in Photoshop with that image.

swingset:

icangetsexualtoo:

(via obliteratedheart)


Very nicely done. Lunar is so much better than solar.
February 9 2010 · 2:23am

swingset:

icangetsexualtoo:

(via obliteratedheart)

Very nicely done. Lunar is so much better than solar.

bohemea:

Perfume

It’s obviously Photoshopped a bit, but it’s still glorious. I love that color.
January 28 2010 · 9:12pm

bohemea:

Perfume

It’s obviously Photoshopped a bit, but it’s still glorious. I love that color.

(via swingset)

Cool Photoshop, but still too obvious of a Photoshop for my tastes.
January 13 2010 · 5:59am

(via swingset)

Cool Photoshop, but still too obvious of a Photoshop for my tastes.

Regardless of its origins, I still love it. If only we could be so lucky as to see such things!

swingset:

bustour:cmmnlifechmstry:reappear:nazifa:

 The Milky Road   Credit & Copyright:  Larry Landolfi
2007 October 20
 Explanation:  Inspired during a visit to Fort Davis, Texas, home of McDonald Observatory and dark night skies, photographer Larry Landolfi created this tantalizing fantasy view.  The composited image suggests the Milky Way is a heavenly extension of a deserted country road.  Of course, the name for our galaxy, the Milky Way (in Latin, Via Lactea), does refer to its appearance as a milky band or path in the sky.  In fact, the word galaxy itself derives from the Greek for milk.  Visible on moonless nights from dark sky areas, though not so colorful as in this image, the glowing celestial band is due to the collective light of myriad stars along the plane of our galaxy, too faint to be distinguished individually.  The diffuse starlight is cut by dark swaths of obscuring galactic dust clouds.  At the beginning of the 17th century, Galileo turned his telescope on the Milky Way and announced it to be composed of innumerable stars.
Regardless of its origins, I still love it. If only we could be so lucky as to see such things!

swingset:

bustour:cmmnlifechmstry:reappear:nazifa:

The Milky Road
Credit & Copyright: Larry Landolfi

2007 October 20

Explanation: Inspired during a visit to Fort Davis, Texas, home of McDonald Observatory and dark night skies, photographer Larry Landolfi created this tantalizing fantasy view. The composited image suggests the Milky Way is a heavenly extension of a deserted country road. Of course, the name for our galaxy, the Milky Way (in Latin, Via Lactea), does refer to its appearance as a milky band or path in the sky. In fact, the word galaxy itself derives from the Greek for milk. Visible on moonless nights from dark sky areas, though not so colorful as in this image, the glowing celestial band is due to the collective light of myriad stars along the plane of our galaxy, too faint to be distinguished individually. The diffuse starlight is cut by dark swaths of obscuring galactic dust clouds. At the beginning of the 17th century, Galileo turned his telescope on the Milky Way and announced it to be composed of innumerable stars.