Scribbles.
From the front matter of The Child: Its Care, Diet, and Common Ills by Elisha Mather Sill (1913). Original from the University of...
April 28, 1948: This photo ran as part of a two-page photo essay about the “Washington scene.” The hats, piled on an eight-foot mahogany table in...
Plate photographed through protective tissue.
The frontispiece to Aunt Maddy’s Diamonds by Harriet Myrtle (1864).
From the Globe and Mail, Saturday February 18, 2012
25 great quotes that didn’t make it into Steal Like An Artist.
Employee fingertips corrected with text, stripes, patterns, and colors.
From various pages of De Ratiociniis in Ludo Aleae by Christiaan...
The Chantels - Maybe
Courtesy of Aquarium Drunkard, it’s a girl groups morning, starting with this spectacular song, where the vocal range...
1 post tagged The Rumpus
I have enough trouble being creative while also working a day job— and I’m not published and famous!
“Even after he published, Prufrock and The Waste Land, T.S. Eliot continued to work his day job at a bank.” Great article about why Eliot chose to keep working, even after all his friends basically Kickstartered him and tried to get him to quit. “…nobody wants to think about the poet at the water cooler, or, even worse, pouring over actuarial tables.”
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