The very last image from Cassini, showing Saturn’s atmosphere & rings as the probe closed in on the planet. *snif*
Nemfrog creates new content. Every day I go through digital piles of overlooked books, extinct magazines and unremembered 19th and early 20th century science journals, page after page, cover to cover, in search of images that are too good to leave forgotten and unseen any longer. The great majority of what you see on this blog been discovered and rescued by Nemfrog.
Not just a blog. An archive. Posts on Nemfrog contain links back their source. This lets users dive deeper in the original material, sometimes to understand the context, sometimes to search for other images, sometimes to back up scholarly work. All this sourcing I do takes effort and time. It’s work.
Help Nemfrog thrive. For the first time, after 22,223 posts and almost four years, I’m asking for some financial support. Artists message me often to say how much they value the posts on Nemfrog. Designers, teachers and students benefit from Nemfrog’s original research. It’s gratifying that all this happens. More visitors and followers simply come here to gambol in the never-ending image fountain.
But now I have something to ask of you. Can you send $5 or $10 to show me that Nemfrog matters? Thanks in advance to everyone who can give something. I also feel the support by of everyone who follows, gives notes and reblogs. I appreciate that too.
In case you wonder, this is a fundraising drive, like something on NPR. It ends on Monday, Sept. 4. It’s not a permanent thing.
Anton Faistauer (Austrian, 1887-1930)
Lying female nude with apple still life (Liegender Frauenakt mit Apfelstillleben), 1911
Oil on canvas
“The luminous marine snail, Palnaxis viratus, from Hachijo Island, Japan.” The luminescence of biological systems. 1955.
A photo of Saturn. Took by Cassini with COISS on February 13, 2007 at 06:45:16. Detail page on OPUS database.
and speak to me from the depths of this long night as if we were anchored here together, tell me everything, chain by chain, link by link and step by step,
Pablo Neruda, from section “XII,” of excerpts from Heights of Macchu Picchu, transl.Tomás Q. Morín, Plume (August 2017)
“Typical oscilloscope trace.” The luminescence of biological systems. 1955.
Pierrette Bloch (French, born 1928)
Untitled, 1977
Ink on paper on isorel