Quote from: SimPattyK on May 27, 2012, 05:07:09 PM

TMZ links:
Lisa Marie Presley -- Thanks for the Michael Jackson Flower Shower | TMZ.com
Michael Jackson -- Here Come the Sunflowers | TMZ.com
Michael Jackson in Sunflower Heaven | TMZ.com
Michael Jackson Fans Dispute Lisa Marie Presley Cemetery Claims | TMZ.com
Lisa Marie Presley Wants Flowers at Michael Jackson Tomb | TMZ.com
Montages
----- > [/b] Lisa Marie Presley ~ interviews/videos/articles/photos



----- > PRONUNCIATION[/b] Pronouncing Phi
Leading authors on the subject of phi offered the following comments:
* Two in the USA and UK confirmed that fi is the preferred pronunciation.
* One noted that in the UK "phi" was always pronounced to rhyme with "pie" but that some Americans at conferences pronounced it "fee".
• Another noted that in Greek the letter PHI is indeed pronounced PHEE. However, in Greek the letter we call PI is also pronounced PEE. Consequently, depending on whether you want to adopt the Greek or American pronunciation you can pronounce it as PHEE or PHI. In mathematical circles, the letter used for the Golden Ratio is normally TAU.
----- > PHONETICS[/b] Interesting Phonetics of Phi, the Golden Ratio. How do you say "Phi"

----- > SUNFLOWERS Nature, The Golden Ratio and Fibonacci Numbers
----- > SunFlower: the Fibonacci sequence, Golden Section SunFlower: the Fibonacci sequence, Golden Section | Flickr - Photo Sharing!
"The head of a flower is made up of small seeds which are produced at the center, and then migrate towards the outside to fill eventually all the space (as for the sunflower but on a much smaller level). Each new seed appears at a certain angle in relation to the preceding one. For example, if the angle is 90 degrees, that is 1/4 of a turn.
[....]
This is why the number of spirals in the centers of sunflowers, and in the centers of flowers in general, correspond to a Fibonacci number. Moreover, generally the petals of flowers are formed at the extremity of one of the families of spiral (true, I count 34 for this sunflower). This then is also why the number of petals corresponds on average to a Fibonacci number. "
Research Links:
SWIRLS ----- > sheilaodomhollinghead.wordpress.com/2011/03/02/238/
PATTERNS ----- > ATPM 10.02 - Quick Tips in Design: Part 8: Pattern
SACRED GEOMETRY ----- > View Profile
We see swirls all around us. In shells, in sunflowers, in hurricanes, and in galaxies, to name just a few. Some swirls are known as golden spirals. According to Wikipedia, a golden spiral is a logarithmic spiral whose growth factor b is related to φ, the golden ratio. Specifically, a golden spiral gets wider (or further from its origin) by a factor of φ for every quarter turn it makes.
INNER EAR----- > A Field Guide to Identifying Unicorns by Sound
^^ remember Michael's reference to inner ear ...during "This is IT" ?
Fibonacci Numbers and the Golden Section (nature, plants) ----- > Fibonacci Numbers, the Golden section and the Golden String
ART
The Golden Ratio in the Work of Vincent van Gogh ----- > The Golden Ratio in the Work of Vincent van Gogh | Suite101.com
^^ Remember all the Van Gogh - clues we've received?
Da vinci – the Last supper ----- > History of Phi, the Golden Ratio
Art-architecture-design ----- > Golden Ratio
BEAUTY & Masks ----- > MBA California
Karl Jung – archetypes- beauty ----- > MBA California
Just a little clues-recap...