Two (of many) very satisfying time lapse videos by the Rescue And Restore channel showing the deconstruction and rehabilitation of (in this case) a rusted-up Tonka dump truck and military jeep.
Come for the nostalgia, stay for the sandblasting.
Two (of many) very satisfying time lapse videos by the Rescue And Restore channel showing the deconstruction and rehabilitation of (in this case) a rusted-up Tonka dump truck and military jeep.
Come for the nostalgia, stay for the sandblasting.

Optically bewildering ‘vortex’ sculptures by LA-based artist Jen Stark – her depiction of complex scientific and mathematical concepts like infinity, evolution and sacred geometry.
Stark’s exhibition ‘Dimensionality’ opens next month at the Joshua Line Gallery in New York, if you’re passing.
Arrangements of seemingly pixellated and overlapped fruit created (without any digital manipulation) by Japanese art director Yuni Yoshida.
The incredible nuanced drawings of South Korean artist WanJin Gim, who captures gestural energy and posture – the colours and textures of skin (and the occasional cat) by cross-hatching onto kraft paper.
From the Tiny Pricks Project: “creating a material record of Trump’s presidency”.
In fairness.
Jack Nugent of film deconstruction channel Now You See It explores the way that sound design in cinema (most of which happens long after the cameras stop rolling) is less about creating realistic or believable sounds and more about manipulating and amplifying the emotion of scenes.
The evocative watercolours of Chinese painter Zhifang Shi who travels the world painting each of his subjects en plein air, focussing on architectural points of entry and, elsewhere, modes of transport.
His instagram is well worth a browse.