9/11 Memorial. #911 #nyc #newyork (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
As much as I hate NYC, I gotta admit it sure can be a photographer’s dream at times. #nyc #newyork #landscape #cityscape (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
This is some sort of self-portrait. Seems like I’m getting really into abstractions now that I’m officially a starving artist. #abstract #art #portrait (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
“You didn’t prepare me for this…”
Hanna is one of the most perfect movies ever.
(Source: sundriedraisins)
Ryan Hopkinson made and photographed these homemade tornadoes with creative pair Lighting+Kinglyface.
With smoke (we’re thinking colored smoke bombs) and extremely controlled environment, they made 20 four-foot-tall tornadoes!
via crematorie
Times like these I wish my life actually was a movie so I could choose the soundtrack. “I’m On A Boat” would definitely be playing right now. Also…can my friends plan a party or what?! #BOOZECRUISE (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
Ambiance, view, drinks. Senior Week is gonna be hard one to top. #boozecruise (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
The last EVVYs credentials and t-shirt I’ll ever get. Give me a minute while I try to compose myself. #bittersweetlifemoments (Taken with instagram)
(Source: simplekomplezzity)
Here is a Georgia State Trooper in riot gear at a KKK protest in a north Georgia city back in the 80s. The Trooper is black. Standing in front of him and touching his shield is a curious little boy dressed in a Klan hood and robe. I have stared at this picture and wondered what must have been going through that Trooper’s mind. Before the Trooper is an innocent child who is being taught to hate him because of the color of his skin. The child doesn’t understand what he is being taught, and at this point he doesn’t seem to care. Like any other child his curiosity takes hold and he wants to explore this new thing that this man is holding probably because he can see his reflection in it and that’s a neat thing and he wants to check it out. In this picture I see innocence mixed with hate, the irony of a black man protecting the right of white people to assemble in protest against him, temperance in the face of ignorance, and hope that racism can be broken because this young boy may remember that a black man smiled at him once and he didn’t seem so bad after all.