Photographer Marco Scozzaro takes us back to our primal beginnings amongst waterfalls, lakes and woods.




Photographer Marco Scozzaro takes us back to our primal beginnings amongst waterfalls, lakes and woods.




By artfully manipulating sunlight through a hole, and carefully positioned mirrors in a fog filled studio, artist James Nizam captures geometric beauty in stark monochromatic prints.






I love snakes. I love how they move, seemingly with magic. I love their bright colours and scaly skins. I love them even more when photographer Guido Mocafico placed them in boxes and made geometric sense of their chaotic twists and turns.






Brian Ulrich captures the empty shells of malls way past their heydays, documenting the weather stained walls that lets you almost make out the sign that used to proudly shout its name, and the ghostly interiors you could almost imagine yourself shopping in.





Iceland’s amazing landscape captured by Michael Schlegel in stark black and white contrast brings out nature’s daunting side.
If there’s anything I love more than the colour orange, its seeing it paired beautifully with turquoise! Matthias Heiderich photographs his favourite places in a controlled and pure manner, making even the simplest streetlamp look like its a work or art.









Photographer Phillip Stearns produced a collection of woven and knit blankets using images generated from short circuited cameras as pattern sources.








American artist Jim Sanborn projected stark geometric shapes onto hills and mountains, creating juicy juxtaposition.




A very dedicated (and patient) Matthew Yake collected and lovingly photographed all 237 pieces of trash he found around the bleachers.








Van Wanten Etcetera executed a great concept, which show the different faces behind the biographies, Anne Frank, Vincent van Gogh, Louis van Gaal and Kader Abdolah. Unfortunately, these books were computer generated, but I am sure there is a way to make real versions of these brilliantly rendered ones.




Photographs are meant to capture a moment in time, no matter how briefly. These high speed photographs of food exploding are captured by Alan Sailor in a millionth of a second.
I always have a special place in my heart for high speed photography. There’s something about freezing and preserving the every scenes that intriques and excites me. The fact that Heinz Maier manages to create these beautiful portraits of coloured water with a simple home-made rig makes them all the more special.







Chicago-based photographer Paul Octavious has a great eye for the simple wonders, best captured in his series called Same Hill, Different Day.








The Big Picture has selection 54 of the tens of thousands of entires to the National Geographic Photo Contest. Here are some of my favourites.





Michael Tompert and Paul Fairchild bought Apple products over a few months, only to destroy them with bullets, fire and running trains. The end result is both entrancing and downright painful. via designboom

Photographer David Trood’s project shows us what an average human being looked like be superimposing the image of different people over each other. Do you find the average human familiar?
100 10 year old Danish children
Ayaka Ito and Randy Church came together to create these amazing series of images that are halfway between photography, 3d rendering and painting.