View allAll Photos Tagged elastica
Cet arbre, qui passe pour être le plus vieux de Buenos Aires, et dont la plantation est estimée vers la fin du XVIIIe siècle, a presque 40m de hauteur et possède des branches de plus de trente mètres de longueur, qu'il a fallu soutenir avec des étais métalliques.
La del lado ya sé desenrolló.
Gomero (Ficus elastica), 4m de alto.
A new leaf coming... The one at left is unrolled now.
Rubber fig, 4m tall.
Santiago, Chile.
John Russell Hayes
Aurora
When the rising sun is tinting
All the sky with opal hue,
Comes the sweet Aurora tripping
For her morning draught of dew.
There she quaffs the rose's nectar,
And the morning-glory's wine;
Hyacinthine honey sips she,
Vowing it a drink divine.
And the lovely flowers regretful
As they see her go away,
Sighing forth their gentle sorrow,
Breathe a fragrance all the day.
2019 08 12_9457.jpgh
A morning-glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics of books.
Walt Whitman
Morning glory (also written as morning-glory[1]) is the common name for over 1,000 species of flowering plants in the family Convolvulaceae, whose current taxonomy and systematics are in flux. Morning glory species belong to many genera, some of which are:
Argyreia
Astripomoea
Calystegia
Convolvulus
Ipomoea
Lepistemon
Merremia
Operculina
Rivea
Stictocardia
Morning glory was first known in China for its medicinal uses, due to the laxative properties of its seeds.
Ancient Mesoamerican civilizations used the morning glory species Ipomoea alba to convert the latex from the Castilla elastica tree and also the guayule plant to produce bouncing rubber balls [2]. The sulfur in the morning glory's juice served to vulcanize the rubber, a process predating Charles Goodyear's discovery by at least 3,000 years.[3] Aztec priests in Mexico were also known to use the plant's hallucinogenic properties (see Rivea corymbosa).
From my set entitled “Morning Glory”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157607213945288/
In my collection entitled “The Garden”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760718...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_glory
Morning glory is a common name for over 1,000 species of flowering plants in the family Convolvulaceae, belonging to the following genera:
Calystegia
Convolvulus
Ipomoea
Merremia
Rivea
As the name implies, morning glory flowers, which are funnel-shaped, open in the morning, allowing them to be pollinated by Hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other daytime insects and birds as well as Hawkmoth at dusk for longer blooming variants. The flower typically lasts for a single morning and dies in the afternoon. New flowers bloom each day. The flowers usually start to fade a couple of hours before the petals start showing visible curling. They prefer full sun throughout the day and mesic soils. In cultivation, most are treated as perennial plants in tropical areas and as annual plants in colder climates, but some species tolerate winter cold. Some moonflowers, which flower at night, are also in the morning glory family.
Morning glory is also called asagao (in Japanese, a compound of 朝 asa "morning" and 顔 kao "face"). A rare brownish-coloured variant known as Danjuro is very popular. It was first known in China for its medicinal uses, due to the laxative properties of its seeds. It was introduced to the Japanese in the 9th century, and they were first to cultivate it as an ornament. During the Edo Period, it became a very popular ornamental flower. Aztec priests in Mexico were also known to use the plant's hallucinogenic properties. (see Rivea corymbosa).
Ancient Mesoamerican civilizations used the morning glory species Ipomoea alba to convert the latex from the Castilla elastica tree and also the guayule plant to produce bouncing rubber balls. The sulfur in the morning glory's juice served to vulcanize the rubber, a process pre-dating Charles Goodyear's discovery by at least 3,000 years.[1]
Because of their fast growth, twining habit, attractive flowers, and tolerance for poor, dry soils, some morning glories are excellent vines for creating summer shade on building walls when trellised, thus keeping the building cooler and reducing heating and cooling costs.
Popular varieties in contemporary western cultivation include the Morning Glory "Sunspots" "Heavenly Blue", the moonflower, the cypress vine, and the cardinal climber. The cypress vine is a hybrid, with the cardinal climber as one parent.
In some places such as Australian bushland morning glories develop thick roots and tend to grow in dense thickets. They can quickly spread by way of long creeping stems. By crowding out, blanketing and smothering other plants, morning glory has turned into a serious invasive weed problem.
Ipomoea aquatica, known as water spinach, water morning-glory, water convolvulus, Ong-Choy, Kang-kung, or swamp cabbage, is popularly used as a green vegetable especially in East and Southeast Asian cuisines. It is a Federal Noxious Weed, however, and technically it is illegal to grow, import, possess, or sell. See: USDA weed factsheet. As of 2005, the state of Texas has acknowledged that water spinach is a highly prized vegetable in many cultures and has allowed water spinach to be grown for personal consumption. This is in part because water spinach is known to have been grown in Texas for more than fifteen years and has not yet escaped cultivation.[2] The fact that it goes by so many names means that it easily slips through import inspections, and it is often available in Asian or specialty produce markets.
The seeds of many species of morning glory contain ergot alkaloids such as the hallucinogenic ergonovine and ergine (LSA). Seeds of I. tricolor and I. corymbosa (syn. R. corymbosa) are used as hallucinogens. The seeds can produce similar effect to LSD when taken in the hundreds. Though the chemical LSA is illegal to possess in pure form, the seeds are found in many gardening stores, however, the seeds from gardening stores may be coated in some form of mild poison in order to prevent ingestion or methylmercury to retard spoilage.[3] They should not be taken by people with a history of liver disorders or hepatitis. They should not be taken by pregnant women as they can cause uterine contraction which can lead to miscarriage. Individuals with a history of cardiovascular disease (Heart attack, blood clot, and stroke) or a family history of such problems, and the elderly should avoid consuming these seeds due to their vasoconstrictive effects.[4][5][6]
Note that the plant known as Korean morning glory, Datura stramonium, is of a different species, is poisonous, and also produces hallucinogenic effects.
130 mm diameter
paper: t=148μm, 128g/m2
10 strips (S-shape based on Spherical Spiral) are interlocked at 12 points.
Each strip is bent and slightly twisted to fit to a reference sphere.
Modelled with Google SketchUp with "Unfold" plugin.
Cet arbre, qui passe pour être le plus vieux de Buenos Aires, et dont la plantation est estimée vers la fin du XVIIIe siècle, a presque 40m de hauteur et possède des branches de plus de trente mètres de longueur, qu'il a fallu soutenir avec des étais métalliques. La base du tronc a plus de 8m de diamètre.
The Netherlands - Amsterdam
Elastic saddle (Helvella elastica - Holsteelkluifzwam) is one of the smaller species of the Helvella (Saddles - Kluifzwammen) genus. Although apparently fairly common, I hadn't seen them before and it was'nt easy to find them. This fungus is typically found fruiting singly or scattered, and sometimes clustered together on the ground or on wood in coniferous and deciduous woods of Eurasia and western North America. © Tom Kisjes
From my set entitled “Morning Glory”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/sets/72157607213945288/
In my collection entitled “The Garden”
www.flickr.com/photos/21861018@N00/collections/7215760718...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morning_glory
Morning glory is a common name for over 1,000 species of flowering plants in the family Convolvulaceae, belonging to the following genera:
Calystegia
Convolvulus
Ipomoea
Merremia
Rivea
As the name implies, morning glory flowers, which are funnel-shaped, open in the morning, allowing them to be pollinated by Hummingbirds, butterflies, bees, and other daytime insects and birds as well as Hawkmoth at dusk for longer blooming variants. The flower typically lasts for a single morning and dies in the afternoon. New flowers bloom each day. The flowers usually start to fade a couple of hours before the petals start showing visible curling. They prefer full sun throughout the day and mesic soils. In cultivation, most are treated as perennial plants in tropical areas and as annual plants in colder climates, but some species tolerate winter cold. Some moonflowers, which flower at night, are also in the morning glory family.
Morning glory is also called asagao (in Japanese, a compound of 朝 asa "morning" and 顔 kao "face"). A rare brownish-coloured variant known as Danjuro is very popular. It was first known in China for its medicinal uses, due to the laxative properties of its seeds. It was introduced to the Japanese in the 9th century, and they were first to cultivate it as an ornament. During the Edo Period, it became a very popular ornamental flower. Aztec priests in Mexico were also known to use the plant's hallucinogenic properties. (see Rivea corymbosa).
Ancient Mesoamerican civilizations used the morning glory species Ipomoea alba to convert the latex from the Castilla elastica tree and also the guayule plant to produce bouncing rubber balls. The sulfur in the morning glory's juice served to vulcanize the rubber, a process pre-dating Charles Goodyear's discovery by at least 3,000 years.[1]
Because of their fast growth, twining habit, attractive flowers, and tolerance for poor, dry soils, some morning glories are excellent vines for creating summer shade on building walls when trellised, thus keeping the building cooler and reducing heating and cooling costs.
Popular varieties in contemporary western cultivation include the Morning Glory "Sunspots" "Heavenly Blue", the moonflower, the cypress vine, and the cardinal climber. The cypress vine is a hybrid, with the cardinal climber as one parent.
In some places such as Australian bushland morning glories develop thick roots and tend to grow in dense thickets. They can quickly spread by way of long creeping stems. By crowding out, blanketing and smothering other plants, morning glory has turned into a serious invasive weed problem.
Ipomoea aquatica, known as water spinach, water morning-glory, water convolvulus, Ong-Choy, Kang-kung, or swamp cabbage, is popularly used as a green vegetable especially in East and Southeast Asian cuisines. It is a Federal Noxious Weed, however, and technically it is illegal to grow, import, possess, or sell. See: USDA weed factsheet. As of 2005, the state of Texas has acknowledged that water spinach is a highly prized vegetable in many cultures and has allowed water spinach to be grown for personal consumption. This is in part because water spinach is known to have been grown in Texas for more than fifteen years and has not yet escaped cultivation.[2] The fact that it goes by so many names means that it easily slips through import inspections, and it is often available in Asian or specialty produce markets.
The seeds of many species of morning glory contain ergot alkaloids such as the hallucinogenic ergonovine and ergine (LSA). Seeds of I. tricolor and I. corymbosa (syn. R. corymbosa) are used as hallucinogens. The seeds can produce similar effect to LSD when taken in the hundreds. Though the chemical LSA is illegal to possess in pure form, the seeds are found in many gardening stores, however, the seeds from gardening stores may be coated in some form of mild poison in order to prevent ingestion or methylmercury to retard spoilage.[3] They should not be taken by people with a history of liver disorders or hepatitis. They should not be taken by pregnant women as they can cause uterine contraction which can lead to miscarriage. Individuals with a history of cardiovascular disease (Heart attack, blood clot, and stroke) or a family history of such problems, and the elderly should avoid consuming these seeds due to their vasoconstrictive effects.[4][5][6]
Note that the plant known as Korean morning glory, Datura stramonium, is of a different species, is poisonous, and also produces hallucinogenic effects.
type P: parallelogram tiles (small interlocking tabs)
interlocking points are on the reference sphere
t=0.2mm paper, 12 identical strips
This is a macro shot of a cluster of small fungi that seem to have no particular shape. Wish I knew a lot about mushrooms and other fungi. I wonder if they are some kind of Saddle fungus - I came across Helvella elastica on an Internet search last night, but I've no idea if they could be that.
On 8 August 2015, I decided to drive SW of the city for a while. It was a Saturday, so I thought I would go and check if there were other people parked at Brown-Lowery Provincial Park. I had more or less stopped going into the forest there by myself, especially the last couple of years, knowing that Cougar and Bears can be seen there. All I have seen - so far! - is a large Moose on a couple of occasions. The place gives me the creeps, so I usually just walk through the trees closest to the parking lot.
Just a minute or two after entering the forest near the parking lot, I flushed a Grouse, which scared the life out of me. They tend to wait, hidden, and then when you are almost by them, they suddenly "explode" out of the bushes, making ones heart beat fast.
The opposite side of the trail, where I usually find a few mushrooms, had pools of water after the two devastating rain and hail storms that we had had recently. With several cars in the small parking lot, I decided to go just a short way into the park, trying to forget that animals can "smell fear". I did come across a few quite nice mushrooms, but with such a dry, hot summer, this season so far had not been good for fungi. As always, never eat any kind of mushroom unless you are an expert!
The second time my heart started beating really fast was when I was trying to focus on a mushroom and I was aware of a deep, huffing kind of sound coming from right behind me. Slowly turning around, dreading what I might see, I discovered it was just a small Red Squirrel, low down on his/her tree, just a couple of feet away from me. I've never ever heard a Squirrel make this kind of sound before! Sounded rather like what I imagine a bear might sound like, ha.
Almost back at the edge of the forest, I was happy as can be to hear quite a commotion that I recognized as being American Three-toed Woodpeckers. There were three of them high up in a tree, with at least one of them being a noisy, hungry juvenile that was feeding itself but every now and then would want the adult to feed it. This species is uncommon in Alberta, year round, so it's always a treat to see one - and especially three.
rubber tree plant (Ficus elastica) - Red Sheath On Ficus is not a bloom. As it unfurls, new growth appear.
El outfit consiste en/ This outfit includes:
- Chaqueta de piel con capucha de gato / Leather jacket with cat hood
- Mono largo de lycra y tela de media elástica /Lycra Suit
- Corsé de piel/ Leather corset
- Liguero de piel / Leather garter
- Polisón/bustle
If you are interested please send us an e-mail (at our profile^^)
Hope you like it^^
Spitze zu hoch geworden
vor 14 Tagen abgeschnitten
jetzt 2 Wurzeln getrieben
( nach 4 Monaten wieder so gewachsen )
Probablemente Ficus aurea (amate dorado, higuerón, “golden Fig”). Un viejo gigante en San Angel, Ciudad de México. Es común encontrar F benjamina, F elastica (“hule”) y F microcarpa (laurel de la India) en las zonas urbanas de México. Este inmenso árbol lo encontré en una vieja casona y mide probablemente más de 20 m de alto con una copa igual de ancha. Es una especie rara en la Ciudad de México.
Probably Ficus aurea (amate dorado, fig tree, "golden Fig"). An old giant in San Angel, Mexico City. It is common to find F benjamina, F elastica ("hule") and F microcarpa (Indian laurel) in mexican cities. I found this huge tree in an old house and it is probably more than 20 m tall with a crown just as wide. It is a rare species in Mexico City
¡Cómo me gustaba saltar en las colchonetas cuando era un niño!
Sigo siendo un crío... pero ahora no me dejan subir... :-(
Ajustado, tela semi-elasticada amarillo /negro
Talla 38
$12.000
Facebook www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002612046312&sk=wall
Parámetros :: Parameters :: Paramétres: Canon EOS 7D; ISO 100; 0 ev; f 10; 1/160; Canon EF 70 - 200 f4/L IS, 70 mm.
Título :: Title :: Titre ::: Fecha (Date): Cintia Estudio 1 :: Cintia Study 1 :: Cintia Étude 1 ::: 2014/10/19 10:42
(Es). Historia: León. España. Hoy ha sido día de fotos de estudio; estamos haciendo una práctica de un curso en la asociación Legio Photos VII. Nos han ayudado tres chicas actuando de modelos de forma totalmente altruista. Muchas Gracias a todas ellas. Este caso es Cintia, la hija de uno de los asociados que se ha brindado amablemente a posar. Yo había ido en moto al curso, así que utilicé el casco, el guante y la bufanda elástica que normalmente uso. Fue una pose rápida, tres fotos y listo. Había poco tiempo para que todos pudiéramos colocar a Cintia como nos gustaría que apareciera. Todo un placer.
Toma: Dos focos de ventana como podéis observar en el brillo de los ojos, que produce un reflejo angular. Uno delante a 1.5 metros y otro detrás a una distancia parecida. Un deflector a la izquierda abajo para iluminar las zonas de sombra. No lo conseguí del todo, en el ojo izquierdo quedó una sombra producida por el pelo que genera una sensación de ser un maquillaje un tanto… "gótico"… pero después de mirarlo durante un largo rato me acabó gustando. ¿O quizá me he acabado acostumbrando a él?. Una mano con guante y otra sin él, con eso conseguía esa chispa de rojo en la parte central de la imagen. El pelo recogido con la bufanda elástica de National Geographic le daba un aire aún más informal.
Tratamiento: Con Aperture. Original en RAW con mejora básica de Aperture. Vuelvo la formato cuadrado; con el fondo negro sólido creo que es la mejor opción. No tiene apenas tratamiento adicional. No hay retoques en parte alguna de la piel. Hay un ligero aumento de la vibración de color y el único tratamiento importante es el decremento de las luces altas de la parte posterior del casco que habían sido quemadas por el foco posterior.
¡Eso es todo amigos!
(En). The History: León. Spain. Today was picture day study; we are making a practice of a course at the Legio VII Photos Association. We have helped three girls acting completely altruistic models. Many thanks to all of them. This case is Cynthia, the daughter of one of the associated has kindly offered to pose. I had coming on the bike, so I used the helmet, elastic glove and scarf I normally use. It was a quick pose, three photos and ready. There was little time for everyone to put Cynthia as we would like it to appear. A pleasure.
Taking up: Two window-lights since you can observe in the sheen of the eyes, that it produces an angular reflection. One ahead to 1.5 meters and other one behind to a similar distance. A diffusor to the left side below to illuminate the zones of shade. I did not obtain it completely, in the left eye there stayed a shade produced by the hair that generates a sensation of being a makeup rather … "Gothic" … but after looking at it during a long moment I ended up by liking it. Or probably I have ended myself accustoming him?. A hand with glove and other one without him, with it was obtaining this spark of red in the central part of the image. The hair gathered with National Geographic's elastic scarf was giving him an air furthermore informally.
Treatment: With Aperture. Original RAW with Aperture Basic improving. I turn the format squared; with the black solid bottom I believe that it is the best option. It does not have scarcely additional treatment. There are no retouches anywhere of the skin. There is a light increase of the vibration of color and the only important treatment is the decline of the high lights of the later part of the hull that had been burned by the later area.
That's all folks !!
(Fr). Histoire: Léon. L'Espagne. Aujourd'hui c'était une journée de photos d'étude; nous faisons une pratique d'un cours dans l'association Legio Photos VII. Trois filles nous ont aidé en jouant le rôle des modèles de forme totalement altruiste. Merci beaucoup à toutes. Ce cas est Cintia, la fille de l'un des associés qui a aimablement offert à se poser. J'étais allé dans une moto au cours, tel que j'ai utilisé la coque, le gant et l'écharpe élastique que j'utilise normalement. C'était l'une posez-lui rapide, trois photos et j'enregistre. Il y avait peu de temps pour que tous pussions placer Cintia comme il nous plairait qu'il apparût. Tout un plaisir.
Prendre: Deux foyers de fenêtre comme vous pouvez observer dans l'éclat des yeux, qu'il produit un reflet angulaire. L'un devant à 1.5 mètres et autre derrière à une distance pareille. Un déflecteur à la gauche en bas pour illuminer les zones d'ombre. Je ne l'ai pas obtenu tout à fait, dans l'oeil gauche il est resté une ombre produite par le poil qui génère une sensation d'être un maquillage un peu … un "un gothique" … mais après l'avoir regardé durant un long moment a fini par me plaire. Ou peut-être me suis-je terminé en l'habituant ?. Une main avec gant et l'autre sans lui, avec cela obtenait cette étincelle de rouge dans la partie centrale de l'image. Le poil repris avec l'écharpe élastique de National Geographic lui donnait un air encore plus peu sérieux.
Traitment: Avec Aperture. Origine amélioration RAW d'Aperture base. Je tourne le format carré; avec le fond noir solide je crois que c'est la meilleure option. Il n'a pas à peine de traitement additionnel. Il n'y a nulle part de retouches de la peau. Il y a une légère augmentation de la vibration de couleur et le traitement unique important est le décrément des hautes lumières de la partie postérieure de la coque qui avaient été brûlées par le foyer postérieur.
Voilà, c'est tout!
El mundo interconectado de Steelcase.
Nikon D3100 /0,05 sec (1/20 / Aperture f/ 6,3 / Tamron 270mm macro/ ISO 100 /
Chris played
Aerial Tai- Kate Bush
Suicide Dreams 2- How To Dress Well [Holy Other Mix]
Carousel- East India Youth
Quando Quando- Engelbert Humperdinck
So Long Marianne- Leonard Cohen
Ain't No Sunshine- Bill Withers
Love Is A Losing Game- Amy Winehouse
I Never Will Marry- Linda Ronstadt
The Letters- Joe Cocker
98.6- Keith
Hypnodance- Who's Who
Cuba- Gibson Brothers
Dr Kiss Kiss- 5000 Volts
Sign Of The Times- Bryan Ferry
Lady Is A Tramp- Della Reese
Read U Wrote U- Ru Paul [Ellis Miah Mix]
Let Me Go- Heaven 17
Rasputin- Boney M
Outside- George Michael
Dom played
Robinson Crusoe Theme- Robert Mellin & Gian- Piero Reverberi
Moon River- Henry Mancini & Johnny Mercer
Paradise Circus- Massive Attack [Gui Boratto Mix]
Don't You Know- Jan Hammer
Physical Fraction- Trentemoller played over
Bladerunner Theme- Vangelis played over
Lost In The Humming Air- Brian Eno & Harold Budd
If You Can't Give Me Love- Suzi Quatro
Come In My Mouth- Let My People Come
Crash- Usher
Come With Me- Black Coffee ft Mque
Beltane Walk-T Rex
Tour De France- Kraftwerk
Birthday Card- Marcus Marr & Chet Faker
Waiting For A Train- Flash & The Pan
I'm In Love With A German Film Star- Sam Taylor Wood [Jürgen Paape Mix]
Sweet Harmony- Beloved
The Survivors- Pet Shop Boys
Can You Hear Me?- David Bowie
Matthew Stradling played
L'eau de Rose - Air ft. Louis Armstrong
Happy House (SFB Free Vocal) - Siouxsie And The Banshees
Naive Song - Mirwais
Elastic Love - Christina Aguilera
Keep On Loving You - Cigarettes After Sex
What Now My Love - Shirley Bassey
Rebel Rebel - Dead or Alive
Circles - Izzy Bizu
Music for Celeste - Bela Bartok
Blackstar (Middle Section) - David Bowie
Oxygene - Part 4 (Magic Finger Project Remix) - Jean Michel Jarre
Beautiful Ones - Suede
You Can't Always Get What You Want (Soulwax Remix) - The Rolling Stones
America What Time is Love - KLF
You Only Live Twice - Nancy Sinatra
To Me You Are A Work Of Art - Morrissey
Bitter Sweet Symphony - The Verve
Rock 'n' Roll Suicide - Black Box Recorder
BATTLE
Boogie Oogie Oogie- A Taste Of Honey
Ever So Lonely- Monsoon
Horse With No Name- America [Todd Terje re-edit]
Jungle Rock- Hank Mizell
Mama Used To Say- Junior
Deutscher Girls- Adam & The Ants
Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye- Bananarama
Shake It All Over- Suzi Quatro
Never Gonna Give You Up- Rick Astley
Charmless Man- Blur
Oblivious- Aztec Camera
The In Crowd- Bryan Ferry
Walk On The Wild Side- Lou Reed
Heaven Is In The Back Seat Of My Cadillac- Hot Chocolate
Edge Of Seventeen - Stevie Nicks
Can't Get Enough- Soulsearcher
Love Never Felt So Good- Michael Jackson
Big Sky- Kate Bush
I Eat Cannibals- Toto Coelo
Right Now- Creatures
If I Can't Have You- Yvonne Elliman
Liquidator- Harry J Allstars
Fashion- David Bowie
One Way Or Another- Blondie
Feels Like Heaven- The Cure
Senses Working Overtime- XTC
Sheila Take A Bow- The Smiths
There Is A Ghost In My House- R. Dean Taylor
Hey Music Lover- S' Express
Aquarius/ Let The Sunshine- Fifth Dimension
Jumpin' Jack Flash-Thelma Houston
New Life- Depeche Mode
From LA To New York- Patsy Gallant
Fade To Grey- Visage
Calling Occupants Of Interplanetary Craft- The Carpenters
Connection- Elastica
I came across this live version of Trio's 1982 hit by Elastica, which I loved. However, the sound was a bit timid for me, so I have weaponised it. It starts off close to the original, but then takes off into another dimension. What I love, as well as the music, is that it is played with unadulterated joy.
In 1995 Elastica's first album became the fastest selling British debut in history.
...or some of them, as long as I remember
THE REFILONS - The Bad Touch
SONIC YOUTH - Goo
THE DONNAS - Get Skintight
DEFTONES - White Pony
BLIND MELON - Blind Melon
MR. BUNGLE - California
SUPER FURRY ANIMALS - Radiator
THE BEATLES - Revolver
THE WANNADIES - Bagsy Me
DAFT PUNK - Discovery
ROXY MUSIC - Country Life
ELASTICA - Elastica
THE BEASTIE BOYS - Solid Gold Hits
MADONNA - You Can Dance
MASSIVE ATTACK - Mezzanine
GUNS N ROSES - Appetite For Destruction
GORILLAZ - Gorillaz
TURBONEGRO - Party Animals
THE LA'S - The La's
As seen in Fascinating Girl's Flickr
CARLOTTA STORELLI, FICUS ELASTICA & HONEVO CHAIR
INSTITUCIÓN LIBRE DE ENSEÑANZA
MADRID DESIGN FESTIVAL
Honevo Photo