— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 30, 2020
from Twitter https://twitter.com/GreyCoopre
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From the birthing pit to the routinely transcendental. An aggregator of what we're doing, tinkering with and liking here at Square One Ranch.
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 30, 2020
Anonymous said: Audrey totter... ha ha ha ha ha… Thank you! Uncle Vic https://t.co/Jpe4Wi1Bo4
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 30, 2020
📷 inky-curves: Al Capp’s Wolf Gal #1 https://t.co/6qCcFb00vQ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 28, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 28, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 28, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 25, 2020
According to Old Scandinavian mythology and Folklore, The Kraken was a giant sea creature who would attack sailing ships and was mistaken as a empty island. The first time it is mentioned is in a old Icelandic saga Örvar-Oddr during the 13th century.#FolkloreThursday @AdamsQuaid pic.twitter.com/76ifwImtyP
— Carter (@CfranklinCarter) January 23, 2020
📷 aqua-regia009: Winter Landscape (1885) - Wilhelm Schroeter https://t.co/0azAp3yOVk
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 23, 2020
📷 theimpossiblecool: “Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working.” Pablo Picasso. https://t.co/cJMrK2dw5I
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 23, 2020
The Castrati were Italian opera singers who had been castrated as young boys to preserve their high pitched singing voices. When the Castrati performed in 18th century Italy, appreciative audiences would shout 'Viva il coltello' (long live the knife) pic.twitter.com/eITvJ0VskB
— Whores of Yore (@WhoresofYore) January 20, 2020
📷 jareckiworld: Volker Stelzmann - Carnevale (mischtechnik auf Nessel auf MDF, 2011) https://t.co/hoz2BvqqMN
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
📷 dutch-and-flemish-painters: Peter Snijers - Aquarius or The Month of January - Pieter Snyers or Peter Snijers (first name also written as: ‘Peeter’ and nickname ‘De Heilige’ or ‘The Holy One’) (30 March 1681 – 4 May 1752) was a Flemish art... https://t.co/DA7dSWeaRA
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
📷 slam-african: Mask, Yup'ik, c.1875, Saint Louis Art Museum: Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas https://t.co/TVWFnvDPIs https://t.co/RahgbOkiRI
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
horror-bmovie: Brain from Planet Arous https://t.co/X1X4N4wfwu
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
📷 nevver: Authentic, VVG https://t.co/iwmm929jKZ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
📷 joeinct: Katonah, New York, Photo by Pentti Sammallahti, 2000Pentti Sammallahti https://t.co/lxcFbhXbEQ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
📷 nobrashfestivity: Inagaki Tomoo Shôwa period https://t.co/sorRh4Lnmx
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 20, 2020
"A frog in a well cannot conceive of the ocean."
— Zen Essentials (@ZenEssentials) January 20, 2020
— Zhuangzi
|
|#perception
📷 20th-century-man: Juliet Prowse / Joseph Cates’ Who Killed Teddy Bear? (1965) https://t.co/ZjQa7iMrQZ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 19, 2020
📷 huariqueje: Cat - Väinö Rouvinen , 1995. Finnish, b.1932- Color etching and aquatint, 100/100, 17x12 cm. https://t.co/784dL7c6sg
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 19, 2020
📷 huariqueje: Cat - Väinö Rouvinen , 1995. Finnish, b.1932- Color etching and aquatint, 100/100, 17x12 cm. https://t.co/TXN3PQJU4S
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 19, 2020
“Hide not your talents. They for use were made. What’s a sundial in the shade.” - Benjamin Franklin https://t.co/hGCEk2hkFJ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 17, 2020
“Anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’” - Isaac Asimov https://t.co/FVvPdEPGvb
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 16, 2020
#FolkloreThursday
— Genevieve Adeline (@Book_Folk) January 16, 2020
From 17th century there was a common practice (esp. among cobblers) of not going to work on Mondays to celebrate the holy day of 'Saint Monday'.
St Monday celebrations involved sleeping in & going to the pub so the saint was sometimes represented as Bacchus. pic.twitter.com/z7rfgtJigY
Suffering from a bad case of writers' block?
— Fran Staines (@StaBoFr) January 16, 2020
If writing is your biz, Spanish superstitions advise you to never sweep your home at night. According with these beliefs, you're sweeping inspiration away by sweeping the muses away. So wait for the early morning.#FolkloreThursday pic.twitter.com/fG5n1IXq6i
1/4 Betelgeuse: Star's weird dimming sparks rumors that its death is imminenthttps://t.co/WHT3cEQH7a pic.twitter.com/qL620olhZo
— Lunar Astronomy; Moon' Exploration & Coloniz/ News (@DubnHG1) January 14, 2020
Batgirl https://t.co/SNvzffcCwW
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 14, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 14, 2020
📷 ochyming: Man Ray 1890-1976 PÊCHAGE, 1972 assemblage - coton et pêches artificielles dans une boîte en bois peint 35 x 23 x 10,5 cm. | 13 ¾ x 9 x 4 1/8 in. https://t.co/ZDPF92uRYV
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 14, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 14, 2020
📷 artist-redon: Red Boat with Blue Sails, 1907, Odilon Redon Medium: oil,canvas https://t.co/Gf3XAatmJZ
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 13, 2020
📷 dailyrothko: Mark Rothko, Untitled (Yellow on Orange) no 579, 1957 Oil on canvas Private collection/Nevada Museum of Art © 1998, Kate Rothko Prizel & Christopher Rothko https://t.co/Ke9sqHe5mq
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 13, 2020
Hunting — Xiao Guo Hui https://t.co/gzsyAS2Dyi pic.twitter.com/CqoxoimnEf
— biblioklept (@biblioklept) January 12, 2020
Photographer Noah Kalina Takes a Photo of Himself Every Day of His Life For Twenty Years (2000-2020) https://t.co/jryS7Mji0x pic.twitter.com/6QmcwNmaUk
— Laughing Squid (@LaughingSquid) January 13, 2020
The lore of the land is told in cottage door gossip. It's currencies are ale and tale. It blossoms in post office queue and is harvested in every school yard. - #CLNolan #Folklore pic.twitter.com/9dLC5s6v1j
— Hookland (@HooklandGuide) January 11, 2020
📷 dextermaurer: Wrong Bathroom https://t.co/TIehtybYO4
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 12, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 12, 2020
The Brahma rooster, the “King of All Poultry” pic.twitter.com/xRGxe3Kj4t
— 41 Strange (@41Strange) January 12, 2020
📷 archiveofaffinities: Luis Barragán, Jesús Reyes Ferreira & Mathias Goeritz, Torres de Satélite, Mexico City, Mexico, 1957 https://t.co/ciKsQVI7Rr
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 11, 2020
Kagami mochi is a Japanese new year's decoration made of two round mochi rice cakes with a small orange on top https://t.co/SKjT5sYrGJ #folklorethursday pic.twitter.com/YxnB8p2Cwm
— Yokai Parade (@Yokai_Parade) January 9, 2020
An astrophotographer has clicked an exceptional video, wherein we can feel the rotation of the earth
— atul kasbekar (@atulkasbekar) January 9, 2020
Using a tracking mount, aligned with North Star, he kept clicking images every 12 seconds for the next 3 hours.
The camera is looking at the same portion of the Milky Way
Fab! pic.twitter.com/5yAuc9VqZd
"I Am The Night!” pic.twitter.com/IJD6cxamrB
— 41 Strange (@41Strange) January 8, 2020
📷 boredpanda: People From Classic Paintings Inserted Into Modern City Life Alexey Kondakov - Daily Life of the Gods https://t.co/hBwE2nPSSz
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 7, 2020
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 7, 2020
I think this man is singlehandedly saving the world. May we all be so genuine and devoted to exposing the oft-suppressed beauty and diversity of nature. pic.twitter.com/RfXULejjPV
— Marina (@shamshi_adad) January 6, 2020
📷 talesfromweirdland: Masked dancers. Illustration from a German/Dutch book on Japan and its neighbours, 1852. https://t.co/yFoEFy8e6r
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 6, 2020
...Epiphany - time for chalk blessing over the door - King Cake - Galette des Rois - when the Three Wise Men arrive from Orient guided by star to meet baby Jesus - Caspar + Melchior + Balthazar - also being Latin for “Christus mansionem benedicat" - “May Christ bless this house" pic.twitter.com/V0866xduoy
— dawn marie j (@dawnieeeeee) January 5, 2020
"Don’t forget the real business of the War is buying and selling."
— biblioklept (@biblioklept) January 3, 2020
Thomas Pynchon, GRAVITY'S RAINBOW
Last day of Mickers Linquist’s (he’s started to call himself L-Quist Dot Com) holiday. Pensively homesick. #linquistinlove squareoneranch https://t.co/W6mNzKcGbT
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 3, 2020
The Repton carnival of fools was worse than ever before. The undertakers of the area joined in the hobby horse parade. Their actual horses pulling a coffin on which small skeletons seemed to dance a jig. - extract from the diary of Arthur Blatchford, 1877 pic.twitter.com/FefZLExKRS
— ReptonGuide (@ReptonGuide) January 2, 2020
📷 enchantedbook: John Bauer - The Princess and the Troll https://t.co/g37XldzuPV
— Grey Coopre, Calli-pitter Hunter (@GreyCoopre) January 3, 2020