What We Love This Week, Volume CXLIII

Published October 9, 2015
Grand Canyon Skywalk

The Grand Canyon Skywalk, the first of its kind, looks out over the Colorado River and the canyon floor, 720 feet below. Image Source: Smithsonian

The World’s Most Majestically Terrifying Skywalks

Chamonix Skywalk Mountain Snow

The Chamonix Skywalk in Aiguille du Midi, France sits 3,396 feet above the valley floor. Image Source: Smithsonian

In 2007, a 70-foot-long pedestrian bridge was built out over the edge of the Grand Canyon. The glass beneath tourists’ feet was all that separated them from the Colorado river and the canyon floor, 720 feet below. This would, naturally, scare some, and, just as naturally, attract perhaps even more. The Grand Canyon skywalk was a hit and, since then, similar structures have been built all over the world. The most recent high-profile project–the 984-foot-long Haohan Qiao glass bridge in China’s Hunan Province–is perhaps the most audacious yet. See more of the world’s thrilling skywalks at Smithsonian.

China Glass Bridge

Thr recently opened Haohan Qiao glass bridge in China’s Hunan Province reaches 984 feet in length. Image Source: Smithsonian

The Rarest Vintage Star Wars Posters

Rare Star Wars Poster

Image Source: Vintage Everyday

With brand iconography as entrenched and monolithic as that of the Star Wars franchise, it’s truly thrilling and enlightening to see some of the early marketing attempts that didn’t become set in stone. That said, much of the Star Wars branding was in place from the start. But from Return of the Jedi‘s original title to The Empire Strikes Back‘s pink motif to Luke Skywalker’s gladiator physique, a few things are now only a thing of the past. Take a trip back in time at Vintage Everyday.

Star Wars Rare Poster

Image Source: Vintage Everyday

Star Wars Vintage Poster

Image Source: Vintage Everyday

The Wonder Of Autumn Around The World

Infant Sitting On Huge Pumpkin

A toddler sits on the winner of the giant pumpkin category during the Royal Horticultural Society London Harvest Festival Show at RHS Lindley Hall on October 6, 2015, in London, England. Image Source: The Atlantic

To some it means harvest. To some it means foliage. To some it means morning mist. Of course, in truth, autumn means countless things to countless cultures across the globe. And depending on your climate and geography, you may never experience the platonic ideal of autumn. But if apples, pumpkins, red leaves, and brisk air feed your soul, dive into autumn at The Atlantic.

Brick House Red Leaves

A Virginia creeper covers the 15th-century tea rooms in Llanrwst in Conwy, Wales, on September 25, 2015. Image Source: The Atlantic

Oktoberfest Crowds Tents Rides

The festival ground during the opening day of Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany, on September 19, 2015. Millions of beer drinkers from around the world came to the Bavarian capital during the two-week festival, which wrapped up on October 4. Image Source: The Atlantic

author
John Kuroski
author
John Kuroski is the editorial director of All That's Interesting. He graduated from New York University with a degree in history, earning a place in the Phi Alpha Theta honor society for history students. An editor at All That's Interesting since 2015, his areas of interest include modern history and true crime.
editor
Nickolaus Hines
editor
Nickolaus Hines graduated with a Bachelor's in journalism from Auburn University, and his writing has appeared in Men's Journal, Inverse, and VinePair.
Cite This Article
Kuroski, John. "What We Love This Week, Volume CXLIII." AllThatsInteresting.com, October 9, 2015, https://allthatsinteresting.com/what-we-love-this-week-volume-cxliii. Accessed April 19, 2024.