image Tom Berenz | Painting

 Fond du Lac, Wisconsin


image Mollie Douthit | Painting

 Grand Forks, North Dakota



image Doug Dubois | Photography

 Dearborn, Michigan


South of the Ohio: A Queer Photo Doc

Featured photographer Christian Hendricks is embarking on a photo project documenting Queer culture in the American South.  Learn more about the project and help chip in a few bucks on the project’s kickstarter, and keep up to date with the project’s tumblr page too.


image Christian Hendricks | Photography | tumblr

 Cincinnati, Ohio


sirbayard asked: Is Marisa Mayer crazy. This site is cool but a bb

Wait, what?  Yahoo just acquired tumblr and we already have to answer to Marissa?..


image Brett Suemnicht | Collage | tumblr

 Milwaukee, Wisconsin


image Julie Farstad | Painting

 Kansas City, Missouri


image Jordan Leitner | Photography

 Milwaukee, Wisconsin


image Caitlin Cherry | Painting

 Chicago, Illinois


picture HD
idigitalfaun:

SOURCE: Forbes.com
This is all kinds of scary. Yahoo are obsessed with acquisitions of sites that execute services better as a way of getting you to use their product. The death sentence that was handed to Flickr through Yahoo’s integration is a prime example of how fast things can go a-wry in a simple business move. 
It’s hard to fault David Karp if that number is really true though. A guy that never finished high school to making a billion dollar business deal is difficult to root against but I do hope that he holds up to his word when he discussed the possibility of a buyout in Forbes’ December issue as mentioned in the above source article.

He didn’t want to get “absorbed into a behemoth of another company and raided for talent and traffic.” But he also mentioned being open to “acquisitions that leave the company alone….There are a lot of paths for us.”

Yahoo’s integration strategy is rarely a case of attempting to get their established audience to use their new product, rather the reverse, ill-fated attempts at trying to push their current services on the existing users of a new acquisition. 

is this the beginning of the end?

idigitalfaun:

SOURCE: Forbes.com

This is all kinds of scary. Yahoo are obsessed with acquisitions of sites that execute services better as a way of getting you to use their product. The death sentence that was handed to Flickr through Yahoo’s integration is a prime example of how fast things can go a-wry in a simple business move. 

It’s hard to fault David Karp if that number is really true though. A guy that never finished high school to making a billion dollar business deal is difficult to root against but I do hope that he holds up to his word when he discussed the possibility of a buyout in Forbes’ December issue as mentioned in the above source article.

He didn’t want to get “absorbed into a behemoth of another company and raided for talent and traffic.” But he also mentioned being open to “acquisitions that leave the company alone….There are a lot of paths for us.”


Yahoo’s integration strategy is rarely a case of attempting to get their established audience to use their new product, rather the reverse, ill-fated attempts at trying to push their current services on the existing users of a new acquisition. 

is this the beginning of the end?


image Jeremy Szopinski | Painting | tumblr

 Ironwood, Michigan


image Wanda Ewing | Mixed Media

 Omaha, Nebraska


image Nathan Osterhaus | Photography | tumblr

 Milwaukee, Wisconsin