I am looking at the stars. They are so far away, and their light takes so long to reach us. All we ever see of stars is their old photographs.
Dr. Manhattan — Watchmen
weareinfinite:

fuckyeahandrewmcmahon:

iswimforbrighterdays:

i-live-for-glitter:

iwanttosaveyou:

savingsmiles:

fuckyeahjacksmannequin:

xxmalerfunx3love:

the mix could burn a hole in anyone , but it was you i was thinking of .
youarebonbon:

merricat:

(via suzywire)

youarebonbon:

I have become
an aeriel view
of a coastal town
that you once knew.

Be good or be gone.
Be good or be gone.

capriquarius:

exclamationmark:

honeyhands:

crashinglybeautiful: Ralph Albert Blakelock - Moonlight, 1886-1895. Oil on canvas

capriquarius:

exclamationmark:

honeyhands:

crashinglybeautiful: Ralph Albert Blakelock - Moonlight, 1886-1895. Oil on canvas

capriquarius:

jacony:

ak47:

seiichirou:

handa:

no description, uploaded by observer
unicornology:

dilaudid:(via awkwardheart)
streettwanderer:

(via iamthecrime)
streettwanderer:

iamthecrime:(via mynovemberguest)
Wired’s - Out of the Blue: Islands Seen From Space
Alejandro Selkirk Island, South Pacific Ocean
This small member of the Juan Fernandez Islands off the coast of Chile measures just under a mile across. But its 5,000 feet of elevation is high enough to reach the layer of stratocumulus clouds pictured above. The result is a type of flow known as a von Karmen vortex street. This striking, curly pattern of eddies can also be seen in clouds, and fluids or air moving past rounded objects such as an airplane wing. This image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite in 1999.
Image: NASA/USGS

Wired’s - Out of the Blue: Islands Seen From Space

Alejandro Selkirk Island, South Pacific Ocean

This small member of the Juan Fernandez Islands off the coast of Chile measures just under a mile across. But its 5,000 feet of elevation is high enough to reach the layer of stratocumulus clouds pictured above. The result is a type of flow known as a von Karmen vortex street. This striking, curly pattern of eddies can also be seen in clouds, and fluids or air moving past rounded objects such as an airplane wing. This image was taken by the Landsat 7 satellite in 1999.

Image: NASA/USGS