A photo series by lensmith R.K. Thorne. Daisies superimposed over industrial accidents. A child’s hand holding a bloom, but the background shows a collapsing cooling tower. The effect is unsettling, not merely ironic. The accompanying essay, “Weed as Witness,” argues that the daisy—Eurocentric, over-discussed in Romantic poetry—becomes radical only when it refuses to symbolize innocence.
The issue’s final page is a blank square of creamy paper, with a single instruction: “Place a pressed daisy here. Write your own 15.525 below. Then pass this magazine to someone you do not yet trust.” As of this writing, no known library holds LS-Magazine LS-Land Issue 16 in its physical collection. Scattered PDFs circulate among private collectors and a small Discord server dedicated to “plant-based transmodernism.” The original print run was rumored to be 150 copies, each with a different dried daisy taped to the inside back cover—15.525 millimeters from the spine, according to the colophon. LS-Magazine-LS-Land-Issue-16-Daisies-15.525
The editorial, simply titled “15.525 Manifesto,” opens with a striking line: “The daisy is not innocent. Count its petals: 34, 55, 89. Fibonacci’s ghost is a mathematician of resistance.” A photo series by lensmith R