Ludwig Wilding (German, 1927 â 2010)
Sample object (Probe-Objekt), 1968
Object box with 2 serigraphs on paper or acrylic glass, 50 x 50 x 6.5 cm.
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Ludwig Wilding (German, 1927 â 2010)
Sample object (Probe-Objekt), 1968
Object box with 2 serigraphs on paper or acrylic glass, 50 x 50 x 6.5 cm.

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Source details and larger version.
Foxy: my collection of vintage fox imagery.
Max Dupain and Olive Cotton
Beach scene from Camping trips on Culburra Beach
The Deluge' (detail) by Gustave Dore, 1886
A grammar of Japanese ornament and design - Thomas W. Cutler - 1880 - via e-rara

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Exploded 80s tech from the JCA Annual.
William Kentridge UNTITLED (CAT)
Her name was Judy-Lynn del Rey. And she became the most powerful editor in science fiction history.
Born in 1943 with achondroplastic dwarfism, Judy-Lynn grew up devouring science fiction in New York City's public libraries. At a time when the genre was dismissed as pulp fiction for teenage boys, she saw something else entirely: the future of storytelling.
She started at the bottomâan office assistant at Galaxy, the most prestigious science fiction magazine of the 1960s. Within four years, she was managing editor.
Then Ballantine Books came calling.
When she arrived at Ballantine in 1973, science fiction and fantasy were afterthoughts in publishing. Fantasy in particular was considered unsellableâunless you were Tolkien. Judy-Lynn thought that was nonsense.
Her first major move was audacious: she cut ties with one of Ballantine's bestselling authors, John Norman, whose "Gor" novels were popular but notoriously misogynistic. It was a risk. She didn't care.
Then came the gamble that changed everything.
In 1976, someone brought her an opportunity: the novelization rights to an upcoming space movie by a young director named George Lucas. Hollywood thought the film would bomb. Studio executives were skeptical. Most publishers passed.
Judy-Lynn said yes.
The Star Wars novelization sold 4.5 million copies before the movie even premiered.
She would later call herself the "Mama of Star Wars."
In 1977, she launched Del Rey Booksâher own imprint, with her husband Lester editing fantasy while she oversaw everything else. Their first original novel was Terry Brooks's The Sword of Shannara. It became a phenomenon.
She didn't stop there.
Remember The Princess Bride? The original 1973 novel had flopped. It was headed for obscurity. Judy-Lynn rescued it, reissuing it in 1977 with a striking gate-fold cover and an aggressive marketing campaign. Without her intervention, there might never have been a movie.
She published the Star Trek Log series. She championed Stephen R. Donaldson's Thomas Covenant trilogyâconvincing Ballantine to release all three books on the same day from a completely unknown author. Unprecedented.
She published Anne McCaffrey's The White Dragonâthe first science fiction novel ever to hit #1 on the New York Times bestseller list.
And she did all of this while competitors called her imprint "Death-Rey Books"âbecause she was utterly dominant.
Between 1977 and 1990, Del Rey Books had 65 titles reach bestseller lists. That was more than every other science fiction and fantasy publisher combined.
Arthur C. Clarke called her "the most brilliant editor I ever encountered."
Philip K. Dick went further: "The greatest editor since Maxwell Perkins"âthe legendary editor of Hemingway and Fitzgerald.
But here's what burns: the science fiction community never nominated her for a Hugo Award while she was alive. Not once. The men who ran the industry praised her in private and overlooked her in public.
In October 1985, Judy-Lynn suffered a brain hemorrhage. She died four months later, at 42.
Only then did the Hugo committee vote to give her the Best Professional Editor award.
Her husband Lester refused to accept it.
He said Judy-Lynn would have objectedâthat it was given only because she had just died. That it came too late.
He was right.
Judy-Lynn del Rey transformed science fiction from a niche hobby into a cultural force. She made fantasy into a mainstream publishing category. She bet on Star Wars when no one else would. She saved The Princess Bride from oblivion. She published the first #1 New York Times science fiction bestseller.
She did all of this standing 4'1" tall in an industry run by men who underestimated her at every turn.
The next time you pick up a fantasy novel, or watch a Star Wars movie, or quote The Princess Brideâ
Now you know who made it possible.
'The Chanticleer and the Fox' by Barbara Cooney, 1958
Otto Piene (1928-2014) [Germany] â 'Telerot und Teleschwarz', 1970. Colour silkscreen on thin card (40 Ă 40 cm).

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Uncredited 1977 cover art for A Medicine for Melancholy, by Ray Bradbury
Häri Ren - The Ram & Cart.
From the Pubs Of England series.
Types of Spirals. Logarithmic Spiral - self-similar spiral curve which often appears in Nature. Spira Mirabilis, Latin for âmiraculous spiralâ, is another name for the Logarithmic Spiral. The size of the spiral increases but its shape is unaltered with each successive curve, a property known as Self-Similarity. Possibly as a result of this unique property, the Spira Mirabilis has evolved in Nature, appearing in certain growing forms such as nautilus shells and sunflower heads. Fermatâs Spiral - in the sunflower and daisy, the mesh of spirals occurs in Fibonacci Numbers because Divergence (angle of succession in a single spiral arrangement) approaches the Golden Ratio. The shape of the spirals depends on the growth of the elements generated sequentially. In mature-disc phyllotaxis, when all the elements are the same size, the shape of the spirals is that of Fermat Spirals - ideally. That is because Fermatâs Spiral traverses equal annuli in equal turns. Archimedean Spiral - it is the locus of points corresponding to the locations over time of a point moving away from a fixed point with a constant speed along a line which rotates with constant angular velocity. The Archimedean Spiral has the property that any ray from the origin intersects successive turnings of the spiral in points with a constant separation distance, hence the name âArithmetic Spiralâ. Hyperbolic Spiral - transcendental plane curve also known as a Reciprocal Spiral. A Hyperbolic Spiral is the opposite of an Archimedean Spiral. It begins at an infinite distance from the pole in the center (for θ starting from zero r = a/θ starts from infinity), and it winds faster and faster around as it approaches the pole; the distance from any point to the pole, following the curve, is Infinite.
Blooming Vessels
Single-cell genetic and signalling analysis maps the factors and receptors involved in determining cell fate as human blood vessel organoids (lab-grown models) develop â insight for using these models in research in health and in vascular disease, such as in diabetes
Read the published research article here
Video from work by Marina T. Nikolova and colleagues
Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zurich, Basel, Switzerland
Video originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in Cell, April 2025
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Japanische Färbeschablonen - 1899 - via Sachsen Digital

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Antti Laitinen, 2D Tree (3), 2017.
Bobbin-made hanging, designed by Luba Krejci (1925-2005), Czechoslovakia, 1964.
Lace in the collection of the Cooper-Hewitt Museum. 1982.
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