Sunday, October 31, 2010

Best Pumpkin of the Year - Shawn of the Dead pumpkin

cool - till next year hoped you all enjoyed the Mega post...

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Pumpkin Remover 2 :

Haunt the House

“Game Over”

Stay away from the Bear kids

Get her something that say's you love her (Brains)

Frightening Finery: 50+ Macabre Jewelry Creations : WebUrbanist

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Lisa Black: Gear-turning Steampunk Taxidermy

Lisa Black: Gear-turning Steampunk Taxidermy

By Marc in Environment & Nature, Gadgets & Geek Art, Technology & Futurism

Lisa Black is a New Zealand artist with some macabre subject matter… she loves to take taxidermy to a disturbing new level that transforms animals into half animal / half machine hybrids. Her skill at faux cybernetic enhancements beautifully complement her exceptional taxidermy to form creations that seem straight out of a mad steampunk scientest’s lab:

(Images via dolinsky, cultureatwork, ps3za, trendhunter)

The most straight up frightening of Lisa Black’s collection are featured above. The only parts left of these strange hybrid creatures are their bones and mechanical accoutrements, except in the case of the heart clock, which is a bit more abstract, and a whole lot grosser.

(Images via slamxhype, centuryguild, slamxhype)

Some of Lisa Black’s depict animals more machine than organic, with frightening results. Her ferret with startling white eyes and outgoing computer components especially gives me chills. The idea that a normal rabbit’s fine fur could be hiding an intricate set of mechanical hardware is an equally terrifying vision of the future.

(Images via apparitionabolishers, seesomethingstrange)

Who wouldn’t want a windup turtle? Especially if it was able to operate exactly like a fully organic one. It’s no wonder some people find taxidermy disturbing – this is enough to push someone into that camp.

(Images via craftzine, superpunch, ladylavona)

It’s interesting how the most minor adjustments can make an animal look so clearly mechanical. Adding a few steampunk elements like winding keys and you’ve immediately leapt to a future where animals are not all that they seem.

(Images via spikeworld, collect3d, impactlab, drpfenderson)

There’s something surreal about a cute, live looking bird with mechanical features. The avian Lisa Black creations seem the most realistic, because of the stuttering motions inherent in bird movements, it’s not too much of a stretch to imagine gears winding around inside them.

Cool Creep stuff

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The Hills Have Eyes: Skull Rock

The Hills Have Eyes: Joshua Tree’s Spook-tacular Skull Rock

By Steve in Environment & Nature, History & Factoids, Travel & Places


Skull Rock, a naturally weathered granite rock formation located in California’s Joshua Tree National Park, stares out across an otherworldly landscape of shattered boulders, tumbling tumbleweeds and eerily twisted Joshua trees. These 13 spook-tacular views of Skull Rock highlight the strange anthropomorphic symmetry that causes stone to resemble bone.

(images via: Wallpapers-s and 1904 Photography)

Joshua Tree National Park was established in 1994 though the area had been designated a U.S. National Monument since 1936. Located in southeastern California, “JTree” (as the locals like to call it) spreads over parts of Riverside and San Bernardino counties and includes portions of two separate deserts, the Little San Bernardino Mountains, and part of the San Andreas Fault.

(images via: The Four Seasons, Douglas Dolde and Art In Nature)

The park boasts several unique distinguishing features, mainly many Joshua Trees (Yucca brevifolia) and weirdly rounded rock formations that are popular with hikers and rock climbers. Some of these odd outcrops have been given names based on their outward appearance, such as Cap Rock (above top), Old Woman Rock (above left) and the Giant Marbles (above right).

(images via: Thomas J Sebourn and Outdoors Webshots)

Skull Rock is one of the easier noteworthy rock formations to get to, being that it’s located at the east end of the Jumbo Rocks campground. Not that there’s anything wrong with an extended hike but families, the elderly and those suffering from disabilities will welcome the somewhat surprising convenience.

(image via: Pashnit Motorcycle Forum)

Drivers entering Joshua Tree National Park along Park Blvd. can see Skull Rock from the road and once parked, the feature is just a few steps away.

(images via: Corbis Images and Ethan Meleg)

Most of the rock formations in the park are granite that solidified out of a molten state over 80 million years ago. Since that time, they have been slowly eroding due to the action of percolating groundwater at first; then wind and rain once the granite became exposed to surface weathering.

(images via: WebEcoist)

Considering the hardness of granite and the arid conditions typical of the region, this is a very long, exceedingly incremental process. In contrast, the weathering of the much softer sandstone in places like Arches National Park (above) is much faster, geologically speaking – as is their inevitable demise.

(image via: Zieglers Rock the Globe)

The granite that makes up Skull Rock and other similar formations in Joshua Tree National Park appears smooth and rounded from a distance but is actually rough to the touch; a by-product of non-glacial weathering combined with nature’s own sand-blasting.

(images via: Samwedin and DesertNana)

By comparison, granite scoured by glaciers or tumbled in rivers and streams presents a much “cleaner” face as the various mineral crystals have been worn flat. This benefits formations such as Skull Rock since they can survive a much greater amount of wear & tear brought about by human activity.

(images via: Corrina Corrina and Della Huff)

Skull Rock is a favorite subject for photographers both amateur and professional, and due to the changing interplay of sun and shadow around the formation’s “eye sockets” and other skull-acious features it’s hard to take the same picture twice. Even at the height of the day when shadows are at their minimum (above, top), the scene takes on an appearance of timeless desolation with only patches of scrub or the occasional skittering lizard to break the visual spell.

(image via: Ashley Tarr)

It’s at dawn or dusk – especially dusk – that Skull Rock takes on an ominous atmosphere, a certain ancient presence, a sense of impending doom… at least that’s what the minds of the more imaginative among us might project.

(images via: Thomas J Sebourn)

Add some creative accessory lighting, adjust the exposure and maybe even tweak the image with Photoshop and Skull Rock really, well, rocks! The above photos taken by Thomas J. Sebourn are perhaps the very best of their kind, endowing Skull Rock with a delightfully disturbing aura of benevolence and, er, badassness, to coin a word. One can easily imagine pre-Columbian tribes conducting ritual sacrifices to the Great Skull Spirit by the light of the moon!

(images via: Jeffrey Sullivan and Juli)

Jeffrey Sullivan and Juli are two other photographers who have enhanced Skull Rock’s chilling visage with some skillful light painting and image processing. The two photos above illustrate two different sides of the formation – not right or left, but good and evil.

(images via: Fiddybobiddyfiddy)

“To blithely go where no one has gone before…” Combine Skull Rock, Star Trek, and Kenner’s 1972 big-eyed, big-headed Blythe doll and you’re pushing awesomeness far beyond the final frontier. Blythe has enjoyed a renaissance in the past few years as Japanese toymaker Takara Tomy has re-issued the doll to the delight of hobbyists everywhere… even in California’s high desert.

(images via: Fiddybobiddyfiddy)

The hobbyist photographer who took the above images meticulously outfitted Blythe in classic Star Trek TOS regalia including a Federation communicator badge and a tricorder. As for the choice of a red uniform… well, we all know what THAT means.

(images via: Chris Mockford)

The so-called “Infinite Monkey Theorem” posits that a monkey typing away randomly on a typewriter (or keyboard) for infinity will, sooner or later, type out the complete works of Shakespeare. This is just a theory, of course, because monkeys don’t live an infinite number of years.

A variation on the concept does exist, however, in the form of Skull Rock. Randomly acting forces of nature have, over the past 80-odd million years, managed to carve out a reasonable representation of a human skull from a massive congealed bolus of volcanic granite. Not too shabby, especially considering that most of the carving occurred before the first recognizable human walked the Earth. Imagine what it’ll look like in another 80 million years… Nature, you really scary!

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Z is for....

Zombie Ryu

zOMBIE Peach

Zombie Admiral Ackbar

Zombie Tinkerbell

Google Reader (1000+)

'Deathcast' (short film) - Halloween 2010

Hello - Halloween

Cool Make-up

PIKA-BRAINS

Zombie Halloween Mega Posting

Welcome to Halloween! Zombie Inc Special

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Cool Pumpkins

Dalek pumpkin wants to exterminate your candy

Here's another incredible cyborg pumpkin to inspire your Halloween envy. A Doctor Who fan spent seven hours crafting a Dalek O'Lantern that will have the neighbors hiding behind the couch. And it's just as impressive with the lights on.

[Planet Gallifrey]

Dalek pumpkin wants to exterminate your candy

How cool is this!

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Friday, October 29, 2010

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

If you watch this, I'm not responsible for the images burnt into your mind

Katy Perry - Peacock (Chatroulette Version), nightmares may follow:

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Some things are just WOW

Silly stuff

Submitted by: reddit
Posted at: 2010-10-26 23:47:54
See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/43743

but it makes sense as well.

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I'm CatMan, no wait

Submitted by: reddit
Posted at: 2010-10-27 17:03:32
See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/44090

hehe.

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Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Warren Ellis » Station Ident: It’s True

Station Ident: It’s True

October 7th, 2010 | photography

I’m cheating this morning, mostly because I just wanted an excuse to post this image by Paul Sizer:

This is warren ellis dot fucking com yes.

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love it.

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