justinrampage:

Steampunk Wolverine still finds time to rock a cigar while disposing of the scumbag criminals. Mikhail Rakhmatullin created this excellent piece for GameArtisans’ 2011 Comicon Challenge.
Wolverine by Mikhail Rakhmatullin (deviantART)

justinrampage:

Steampunk Wolverine still finds time to rock a cigar while disposing of the scumbag criminals. Mikhail Rakhmatullin created this excellent piece for GameArtisans’ 2011 Comicon Challenge.

Wolverine by Mikhail Rakhmatullin (deviantART)

The Singing Ring­ing Tree is a wind pow­ered sound sculp­ture resem­bling a tree set in the land­scape of the Pen­nine moun­tain range over­look­ing Burn­ley, in Lancashire.
Designed by archi­tects Mike Tonkin and Anna Liu of Tonkin Liu, the Singing Ring­ing Tree is a 3 metre tall con­struc­tion com­pris­ing pipes of gal­vanised steel which har­ness the energy of the wind to pro­duce a slightly dis­cor­dant and pen­e­trat­ing choral sound cov­er­ing a range of sev­eral octaves. Some of the pipes are pri­mar­ily struc­tural and aes­thetic ele­ments, while oth­ers have been cut across their width enabling the sound. The har­monic and singing qual­i­ties of the tree were pro­duced by tun­ing the pipes accord­ing to their length by adding holes to the under­side of each. (via Design You Trust)

The Singing Ring­ing Tree is a wind pow­ered sound sculp­ture resem­bling a tree set in the land­scape of the Pen­nine moun­tain range over­look­ing Burn­ley, in Lancashire.

Designed by archi­tects Mike Tonkin and Anna Liu of Tonkin Liu, the Singing Ring­ing Tree is a 3 metre tall con­struc­tion com­pris­ing pipes of gal­vanised steel which har­ness the energy of the wind to pro­duce a slightly dis­cor­dant and pen­e­trat­ing choral sound cov­er­ing a range of sev­eral octaves. Some of the pipes are pri­mar­ily struc­tural and aes­thetic ele­ments, while oth­ers have been cut across their width enabling the sound. The har­monic and singing qual­i­ties of the tree were pro­duced by tun­ing the pipes accord­ing to their length by adding holes to the under­side of each. (via Design You Trust)


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