A weblog devoted (mainly) to visual communications in the pharmaceutical, biotech and healthcare sectors. Edited by Lee W. Potts.

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This page is part of the first version of The Eyes Have It which is no longer being updated. All legacy posts as well as all new material can be found at the new WordPress-powered version located at http://www.leepotts.com/tehi/. Please update your bookmarks.


LSD Blotter Art Gallery

LSD Blotter Art Gallery"Black market LSD blotter generally bears art or a design printed on the paper. The paper is perforated into individual "tabs" or "hits" approximately 1/4 in. x 1/4 in. The sheets are then dipped in a solution containing a known quantity of LSD or have LSD applied with a dropper creating a relatively consistent dosage per tab.

"The creation of blotter has become an underground art form leading to an array of creative and stunning designs. It is likely that a few of the blotter designs shown have never been dipped and were created purely as art.

"Below are scans and photos of more than 75 examples of blotter showing various designs and art. Some show entire sheets while others show only a few hits. Click on each thumbnail to see a larger image."

Comments | Link Cosmos | Permalink | 1/30/2004 12:01:32 AM

Papier-Mâché Anatomical Models

Papier-Mâché Anatomical ModelsOnline companion site for an exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History.

"People have always sought better ways to illustrate and understand the structure and functions of the internal body. Before the discovery of x-rays in 1895, the only practical way to see inside the human body was to observe an operation or a dissection. Cultural and religious beliefs about dissection often made the practice illegal, and even when dissection was acceptable, cadavers were difficult to obtain.

"Moreover, lack of refrigeration meant that bodies decayed swiftly. Dissections had to be performed during the cooler months, and were impossible in warmer climates. Frustrated in his studies, a young French medical student devised an elegant solution — papier-mâché anatomical models.
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Site includes a brief overview of anatomical education methods and a gallery page with enough material to give a sense of how much detail the creators were able to squeeze from this decidedly low-tech raw material.

Comments | Link Cosmos | Permalink | 1/24/2004 12:10:17 AM

Gallery of Nostrums

Gallery of NostrumsThe FDA Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) website offers this collection of marketing ephemeria related to the patent medicine industry at the end of the 19th century. These are the kinds of products that gave us the phrase "snake oil salesmen". It's a little sad to see that many of our culture's obsessions (and the rhetoric used by the unscrupulous to cater to them) have changed so little over the hundred years. [via medpundit]

Comments | Link Cosmos | Permalink | 1/5/2004 10:50:26 PM

Developmental Biology Cinema

Developmental Biology CinemaMaintained by the Society for Developmental Biology, the Developmental Biology Cinema "...grew out of a breakfast meeting at the 13th International Congress of Developmental Biology held in Snowbird, Utah, July, 1997. The aim of this project is to get video sequences of developing embryos (organisms), and experimental techniques, from the developmental biologist's lab to the eyeballs of interested individuals in a user-friendly and inexpensive form."

Comments | Link Cosmos | Permalink | 1/2/2004 11:37:37 PM