Sprayed Layersfor #AlphabetChallenge theme of #WeekCforCloseUpFrom artwork by DANK (see alt text for artist info and comments for full image)#EastCoastKin #photography #graffiti #spraypaint #STRAAT #contemporaryart #Amsterdam #surfacepattern #colour(Android phone camera)
There is a hidden valley, deep in the Australian rainforest. A place where blue lagoons weave through ancient forests. Where mountains rise above the clouds, a countryside haven of endless beauty.
Our Book: http://geni.us/MothertheMountain
/ motherthemountain
/ motherthemountain
Anastasia’s Instagram: / anast.asia
Julia’s Instagram: / juliavanderbyl
We are sisters, Julia and Anastasia Vanderbyl. A few years ago, we began a journey to live a life in perfect harmony with nature. A life of caring for animals, growing fruit, planting trees, gardening, cooking, creating, building and learning to live with the land.
In this time, nature has taught us more than we could have ever imagined.
Our environmental films document the landscape, the lessons we’ve learnt and our work as regenerative farmers here on Bundjalung Country.
We live on the land of the Arakwal and Minjungbal People of the Bundjalung Nation. We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the Country we live on and recognise their continuing connection to the land and waters. We thank them for protecting this rainforest and its ecosystems since time immemorial.
chapters:
0:00 The blue lagoon; a secret waterhole
4:35 Sewing a velvet mini skirt
7:55 The beauty of rain in the countryside
8:29 Traditional embroidery on an antique machine
12:21 Repairing my machinery!
14:52 Butterflies in the rainforest
What happens if you keep slowing down time? Sponsored by Hostinger – Make today your Day One and visit https://ve42.co/VE10. Use code VERITASIUM for an additional discount.
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0:00 How does a strobe work?
3:28 The Man Who Stopped Time
8:43 Spatial vs Temporal Resolution
13:09 1 Trillion FPS
16:56 Watching Light Move
19:04 The Straightest Building in the World
24:19 How to get 1 Quadrillion FPS
28:25 Seeing Electrons
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A huge thank you to Jim Bales, Kim Vandiver, Jamie Chelel and everyone at the MIT Edgerton Center for walking us through Edgerton’s demos – https://ve42.co/EdgertonC
Thank you to Tech Imaging for letting us use their Photron Nova S16 high-speed video camera – https://ve42.co/TechImg
A massive thank you Nikhil Behari, Ramesh Raskar and MIT’s Camera Culture Group for having us over – https://ve42.co/CameraCulture
Check out Prof Raskar’s original trillion FPS coke bottle video here – • Visualizing video at the speed of light — …
A big thank you to Anagh Malik and the University of Toronto Computational Imaging Group.
Check out Anagh’s work here – https://ve42.co/Malik2024
Finally, a huge thank you to Aaron Groff, James Cryan and everyone at SLAC for letting us visit their electron accelerator – https://ve42.co/SLAC
Imagine setting sail from Hawaii in a canoe. Your target is a small island thousands of kilometers away in the middle of the Pacific Ocean — a body of water that covers more than 160 million square kilometers. For thousands of years, Polynesian navigators managed voyages like this without the help of modern navigational aids. How did they do it? Alan Tamayose and Shantell De Silva explain.
Lesson by Alan Tamayose and Shantell De Silva, directed by Patrick Smith.