Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
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Smith College Girls for i-D magazine 2004
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deathiversary blues r exactly as real as everyone says. i miss my boyyyyyy
#i am having a responsible drink and not crying.#i got some of my crying out of the way yesterday and plan to do some more later this evening.#buppa i miss you. i miss you. i miss you. i hate that you're not here.#i miss you. i wish you were here. i miss you. you would love it here. i miss you. there's parts you would hate. like all the doors. i miss y#i miss you i miss you i miss you i miss you i hate that you're not here i wish you were here i want to hold you more than anything i miss yo#you would hate my new schedule. i burn incense all the time now because you're not here to have a coughing fit. the air here is so dry you#would anyways. you'd love the heating vents and the windows. i'd have set up little shelves for you. you'd love the windows. i miss you.
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Moontowers sound like something out of Welcome to Night Vale, but they are real and they are in Austin.





A moonlight tower or moontower is a lighting structure designed to illuminate areas of a town or city at night.
The towers were popular in the late 19th century in cities across the United States and Europe; they were most common in the 1880s and 1890s. In some places they were used when standard street-lighting, using smaller, shorter, and more numerous lamps, was impractically expensive. In other places they were used in addition to gas street lighting. The towers were designed to illuminate areas often of several blocks at once, on the "high light" principle. Arc lamps, known for their exceptionally bright and harsh light, were the most common method of illumination. As incandescent electric street lighting became common, the prevalence of towers began to wane.
Moonlight towers in Austin, Texas, near TxDOT headquarters, served as inspiration for some of the first high-mast lighting towers in the US in the 1960s and 1970s.
- Wikipedia, "Moonlight Tower"
In 1894, the City of Austin purchased 31 used towers from Detroit. They were manufactured in Indiana by Fort Wayne Electric Company and assembled onsite. Some have claimed that Austin put up moonlight towers partially in response to the actions of the Servant Girl Annihilator, also known as the Midnight Assassin, but in fact the towers were not erected until 1894 and 1895, ten years after the murders took place.
When first erected, the towers were connected to electric generators at the Austin Dam, completed in 1893 on the site of present-day Tom Miller Dam. In the 1920s their original carbon-arc lamps, which were exceedingly bright but time-consuming to maintain, were replaced by incandescent lamps, which gave way in turn to mercury vapor lamps in the 1930s. The mercury vapor lamps were controlled by a switch at each tower's base. During World War II, a central switch was installed, allowing citywide blackouts in case of air raids.
- Wikipedia, "Moonlight Towers (Austin, TX)"
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finally made a little zine from all the photos i took of various wires and machines and pylons and etc
this was sooo fun i need to get it printed
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anatomy of a comet by oscar woodiwiss
artist site
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an 18-wheeler died on the side of the highway the other day. a pack of scavenging motorcycles was eating its carcass. one of them growled at me
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oh, speaking of electrical infrastructure, when I visited the US in 2017, I took some photographs of the cool pylons, transmission towers, and substations they have over there. my father has since framed them


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the subway is an angel and they've plastered ads all over her
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