Archive for the 'Oddities' Category

Striking Photographs bring Brothers Grimm’s Homeland to life

Immerse yourself for a few moments in the real world landscapes of fairy tales…

 

Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales Come To Life In Eerie Photography Project

(HuffPost)

 

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“Take a stroll through the forests and woodlands of Middle Europe today, and it doesn’t take long before you begin to imagine yourself as a character in a centuries-old Brothers Grimm story. Be it “Little Red Riding Hood” or “Hansel and Gretel,” it only takes a patch of fog and a thick strip of blackened trees to transport you into the setting of a fairy tale past, elevating your pulse and reminding you why Jacob and Wilhelm reigned supreme in the world of terrifyingly gorgeous children’s literature.

 

Cologne, Germany-based photographer Kilian Schönberger knows this better than most. He grew up with the misty landscapes in his backyard, producing memories that inspired his artistic work — particularly his “Brothers Grimm’s Homeland” series. In it, Schönberger captures the chilly horror hidden inside an abandoned farmhouse or the overwhelming mystery of a moss-covered path leading beyond the horizon. His photographic illustrations bring the Grimm tales to life, proving that the brothers’ folklore can muster goosebumps in both children and adults.

Schönberger’s photographs are certainly dark, conjuring the more sinister images associated with “Sleeping Beauty” and “Pied Piper of Hamelin.” The effects of his photos could be heightened by the fact that the photographer is color blind.

 

‘I think colour blindness (I can’t distinguish green from red, magenta from grey, violet from blue and so on) [sic] can be an advantage especially in forest environments,” the artist explained in an interview with Seamless Photo. “I don’t have to separate singular colours visually and can totally concentrate on the structure for a convincing image composition. Forests are always quite chaotic places — therefore I think the structures are more important for a pleasant result than the colours’…”

 

Click here for the gallery.

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Newton’s Dark Secrets

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Was Newton a scientific genius with secret occult pursuits? Was he a sorcerer? An alchemist? Who was he really?

 

Find out about the secrets revealed in ancient manuscripts in this fascinating NOVA special here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Man Who Turns Corpses Into Diamonds

This does not see morbid to us at all, but rather a beautiful way to preserve a loved one’s memory: Create from their very own carbon a gem stone to be passed down through generations. What do you think Dear Readers?

 

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Meet the Man Who Transforms Corpses into Diamonds

 

By Gian Volpicelli

Vice.com

 

“Rinaldo Willy’s job is to transform dead people into precious stones.

 

Willy, 33, is the founder and CEO of Algordanza, a peculiar funeral home based in the lovely town of Domat/Ems in western Switzerland. Algordanza—which in the local Romansch language means “remembrance”—is one of the leaders in the production of so called “memorial diamonds.” If you fancy a blinged-out eternal sleep, Algordanza will put the latest technologies at your service to convert your ashes into a synthetic diamond.

 

The price for this transfiguration ranges between 4,500 and 20,000 Swiss francs ($5,000-$22,000), depending on how big a diamond you want to become. That includes the packaging of your shiny remains into what the firm’s website describes as a “noble wooden box.” But it will then be up to your loved ones to decide whether to leave you in your noble box or put you on a ring or pendant so they can carry you around with them.

 

Every year, 850 former-people enter Algordanza’s laboratory to emerge some years later as a precious gem. While shortage of land and increasing population are calling the traditional cemetery model into question, perhaps the future of corpse management could lie in this unusual blend of mortuary science and jewelry.

 

To further investigate, I caught up with the man himself, Rinaldo Willy.

 

Motherboard: So, can you tell us how you got the idea of making diamonds from corpses?

 

The idea first struck me ten years ago, when I was a student of economics. One of my teachers gave me an article by a Russian scientist to read; it was about the production of synthetic diamonds to be used in the semiconductor industry. The article explained how such diamonds could be made from ashes, and I misinterpreted it, thinking it was referring to human ashes–while in fact it was talking about vegetable ashes…”

 

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