Looking for the spring.

A little sparrow sitting on a gutting looking on the snow-covered roof vis-a-vis in southern bavaria on Easter 2012

Ein kleiner Spatz sucht den Frühling – er sieht aber nur den Schnee auf dem Dach gegenüber. Weiler im Allgäu, Ostern 2012

So am I

mnmal:

The son of an analogue and digital world. That’s what I am.

I grew up in the 70’s and 80’s. Back then computers as we know them today didn’t exist - although I did get my first one back in the early 80’s, a Texas Instruments TI 99/4A.

Back then my father and grandfathers have certain items that defined men during those years. Items such as the shaving kit, a mechanical watch, a pocket knife, a handkerchief or a small radio transistor.
I still remember fondly my grandfather boiling water to shave every morning, applying a new razor sheet to the butterfly opening shaving razor, then applying the soap with a shaving brush and finally shaving carefully. It was done with purpose, with intent and with quality tools that lasted. I remember the shaving kit my father gave me. I still have it.

I still find myself valuing those tools more than their modern counterparts. Yes, we have better razors, shaving gels and aftershaves today. Yes, we have better watches that those built back in the 30’s and 40’s. Yes, we have a better quality of living thanks to the digital age with computers, iPhones, the Internet and the always being in touch.

Still, there is something so pure, so good, so… analogue in those quality items that still holds a huge part of my analogue/digital heart.

Often I find myself longing for a simpler life, a life that might be harder - like those of my grandparents and parents - but a life that was simpler. People didn’t buy disposable, people bought quality when possible.

People bought quality when possible.

Just a thought.

(Reblogged from mnmal)
Apple had just one customer. He passed away last year.
(Reblogged from minimalmac)

Angetestet: wunderlist

Just published a short review of wunderlist on Taskpaper.de

minimalmac:

Yet another rare and touching photo of a contemplative Steve Jobs on a park bench in Palo Alto. The photo was taken by Ryan Katsanes in 2007.

(via Edible Apple)

(Reblogged from minimalmac)
The truth is, it’s OK to curate your life.

Simplicity - Matt Gemmell 

(via Shawn Blanc)

What we believe in.

(via minimalmac)

(Reblogged from minimalmac)

sirmitchell:

A photograph from 1952 that shows the first millisecond of a nuclear explosion. 

Woah. 

(Reblogged from sirmitchell)

Found on ilovetypography.com