PIT —-> LGA
Airport Americana Look

PIT —-> LGA

Airport Americana Look

•

Holiday Look

Holiday Look

•

Just copped this Heritage Research wilderness parka for the winter months.

Just copped this Heritage Research wilderness parka for the winter months.

•

[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Sufjan Stevens  Casimir Pulaski Day

Never fails to tear me up. I think I could listen to this forever.

•

•

Not quite sure where my sudden obsession with sunglasses came from, but I really want a pair of these.

Not quite sure where my sudden obsession with sunglasses came from, but I really want a pair of these.

•

Kowloon Walled City

•

•

•

•

internationalquiche:

ss713:

New shades.

Where’d you get ‘em from? Haven’t seen much of you lately… (as in, your face on Tumblr)

They’re Ray Ban Clubmasters but I picked them up from a semi-sketchy Chinese eBayer for half price- though, upon close inspection, they do appear to be authentic. And yeah, I’ve been trying to avoid posting too many unnecessary photos of myself on here so as not to seem like a total camwhore.  :)

•

New shades.

New shades.

•

•

bestrooftalkever:

Have you ever walked around in Lower Manhattan and noticed a trail of paint on the sidewalk?

About 3 years ago, one of my friends in school decided to follow the trail around and noticed that the trail produced the image that you see above; a strange-looking rendering of what appeared to be the word “momo.” MOMO, we found out, was the name of an artist that used to be based in NYC, and sure enough, the one responsible for tagging his name across the width of Manhattan.
After requesting a meetup, MOMO told my friend that he accomplished this task by fixing 5 gallon paint buckets to the back of his bike, poking a hole in the bottom of the containers, and riding though the West Village, SoHo, Greenwich Village, East Village, and Alphabet City. Momo made the tag in 2006. Some parts of the line have been covered up by roadwork and redone sidewalks but most of the line is still visible.
To me, the interesting thing about the line is how both similar and different it is to regular graffiti. Essentially, most graffiti writers enjoy seeing their name on things. The bigger they can paint it and the more visible their tag is, the more people will notice their conquering of the city. MOMO created the largest tag in New York, yet the scale of his work here, so massive that it can’t all be viewed at once, means that thousands of people will walk on it each day and never even notice it. It’s simultaneously the biggest and smallest artistic statement I have seen in my time here.
MOMO made a video about the line which you can see here.
If you ever walk over it, now you’ll know what you’re looking at.

bestrooftalkever:

Have you ever walked around in Lower Manhattan and noticed a trail of paint on the sidewalk?

About 3 years ago, one of my friends in school decided to follow the trail around and noticed that the trail produced the image that you see above; a strange-looking rendering of what appeared to be the word “momo.” MOMO, we found out, was the name of an artist that used to be based in NYC, and sure enough, the one responsible for tagging his name across the width of Manhattan.

After requesting a meetup, MOMO told my friend that he accomplished this task by fixing 5 gallon paint buckets to the back of his bike, poking a hole in the bottom of the containers, and riding though the West Village, SoHo, Greenwich Village, East Village, and Alphabet City. Momo made the tag in 2006. Some parts of the line have been covered up by roadwork and redone sidewalks but most of the line is still visible.

To me, the interesting thing about the line is how both similar and different it is to regular graffiti. Essentially, most graffiti writers enjoy seeing their name on things. The bigger they can paint it and the more visible their tag is, the more people will notice their conquering of the city. MOMO created the largest tag in New York, yet the scale of his work here, so massive that it can’t all be viewed at once, means that thousands of people will walk on it each day and never even notice it. It’s simultaneously the biggest and smallest artistic statement I have seen in my time here.

MOMO made a video about the line which you can see here.

If you ever walk over it, now you’ll know what you’re looking at.

•

Disney Picsssss

•

  1/46   NEXT