gedankentank.com

Hi, I'm Matthias. I love music, nonsense and people that don't take life seriously. I enjoy tinkering with web stuff and craft interfaces with passion. This tank is full of random things I stumble across and enjoy. Stay hungry, stay foolish - never settle.

30.07.2009

Finally managed to sort out my favorite photos from sweden. Mycket bra!

15.09.2009

Some highlight moments captured while trekking from Switzerland to Italy.

01.11.2009

Bittersweet October

10.11.2009

Swabian thistles!

Swabian thistles!

15.12.2009

nathanmcquary:

nevver:

Want


War is over! If you want it.

nathanmcquary:

nevver:

Want

War is over! If you want it.

16.03.2010

fuckyeaheyegasms:

via Boston.com

Human Landscapes from above. Amazing pictures!

fuckyeaheyegasms:

via Boston.com

Human Landscapes from above. Amazing pictures!

13.04.2010

Wisdom spotted @ Cafe Gräfle, Jena

Wisdom spotted @ Cafe Gräfle, Jena

09.03.2011

fastcompany:


For more than a decade, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority has treated the Atlantic as its very own graveyard, tossing thousands of old subway cars off a barge to rust away on the ocean floor. An environmental crime? Hardly.  The program creates habitats for marine life from Georgia to Jersey and  gives New York’s aging subway cars a vibrant (and free!) retirement  home.
Now, New York photographer Stephen Mallon has captured the MTA’s artificial reef program in a gobstopping  collection of stills that look like what you’d get if you combined an Ed  Burtynsky series with the freeze frames of The Matrix and the train porn of The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (without the agro hostage situation). We’ve got lots of details on the program and a selection of Mallon’s photographs above.

Check out the full slideshow over at Co. Design.

fastcompany:

For more than a decade, the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority has treated the Atlantic as its very own graveyard, tossing thousands of old subway cars off a barge to rust away on the ocean floor. An environmental crime? Hardly. The program creates habitats for marine life from Georgia to Jersey and gives New York’s aging subway cars a vibrant (and free!) retirement home.

Now, New York photographer Stephen Mallon has captured the MTA’s artificial reef program in a gobstopping collection of stills that look like what you’d get if you combined an Ed Burtynsky series with the freeze frames of The Matrix and the train porn of The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (without the agro hostage situation). We’ve got lots of details on the program and a selection of Mallon’s photographs above.

Check out the full slideshow over at Co. Design.

(Source: fastcompany)

12.03.2011

(Source: bebelestrange)

30.03.2011

04.04.2011

thatbrad:

Digital cartridges for 35mm cameras
Oh, please say it’s so!

thatbrad:

Digital cartridges for 35mm cameras

Oh, please say it’s so!

(via bradfm)

10.04.2011

Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre - The Ruins of Detroit

Yves Marchand & Romain Meffre - The Ruins of Detroit

18.04.2011

Crossroads

Crossroads

22.04.2011

02.06.2011

The light

The light

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