In 1981, Joseph Paul Jernigan was sentenced to death for stabbing and shooting 75-year-old Edward Hale, who discovered him stealing a microwave oven in Texas, USA. He was executed by lethal injection at 12:31 a.m. on August 5, 1993.
His cadaver was sectioned in the axial plane at 1 millimeter intervals and each of the resulting 1,871 slices were photographed for the Visible Human Project at the University of Colorado’s Health Sciences Center.
The images were then put together into this animation above and played fullscreen on a computer, which was moved around by an assistant while being photographed in a dark environment. The resulting images are long-exposure “light paintings” of the entire cadaver. Variations in the movement of the computer during each exposure created differences in the shape of the body throughout the series.

Concept & Art Direction by Croix Gagnon
Photography by Frank Schott
Tipped by @AbleParris
John’s Phone. You call, you hang up. Simple as that.
How about this as a Christmas gift idea? I know I’d be psyched… (hint, hint ;)
Weighing in at 12oz and measuring a mere 151 x 57 x 40mm in dimensions, the Jambox is designed by Yves Behar for Jawbone to be a completely mobile wireless speaker and speakerphone.
Love the packaging too: it creates a great user experience for the product.
Watch the video: youtu.be/XgC3zjNH1oU
I knew Don Draper had an iPhone 4.
Some more shots of the cast off-camera, from Rolling Stone’s coverage of Mad Men, also capturing the contrast between life in 2010 and 1965, can be seen at core77.
What would you do if you could travel back in time? Alex Varanese’s answer to that isn’t your usual one. He’d make money selling today’s modern technology in the late 70’s after superficially redesigning it in order to “blend in”.
With this idea, he designed a series of 14 posters of four common 2010 products — an mp3 player, a laptop, a mobile phone and a handheld video game — as if they were designed in 1977.
Check out the alt/1977 project by Alex Varanese.

