Moss Agate looks like it has a forest inside. (Source)
Heidi Gustafson, who has spent the past five years collecting and working with ocher, walks along Whidbey Island’s Double Bluff Beach, off the coast of Washington, in search of the material. She came to scout this area, where she spent time as a child, after recalling its interesting cliff exposure.Some ochers, Gustafson believes, are calling out to be turned into a pigment. Others are more resistant. Those ocher fragments are either returned to their point of origin, or, if Gustafson cannot get back there, placed outside in a stone graveyard of sorts that she has created in the forest near her cabin. A few of her ocher-based artworks hang on the wall.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/24/t-magazine/ocher-heidi-gustafson.html
*gently places a small clump of moss in your hand*
this video is like every facet of what it is to be a cat, all at once
what was the name of the fish my geology teacher called “bad dude” because i put bad dude in my notes and have no idea what the real name is
The Cats of Morroco 💙
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