profoundgaiety:

The innuendo is thick. When a yearbook editor juxtaposes photos like this, we do have to wonder whether it’s as deliberate as it looks.  By the way, the Christian yearbooks invariably have the best innuendo.  In general, the more private the college, the more homoerotic the photos.  Military colleges also ooze with homoeroticism, obviously.

From Atlantic Christian’s 1969 yearbook. 









thinkingimages:

serie flowers © Nobuyoshi Araki courtesy of fondazione cassa di risparmio di modena









thisobscuredesireforbeauty:

A Matter of Life and Death (Dir. Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger, 1946).
Source





catonhottinroof:

Joseph Thorburn Ross (1849–1903) 

Still Life with Fuschias





mudwerks:

Happy New Year

(actual New Year may vary depending on time zone)





modernism-in-metroland:

Penguin Pool, London Zoo (1934) by Berthold Lubetkin & Tecton

Image from astudejaoublie 

A Guide to Modernism in Metro-Land





bando–grand-scamyon:

apersnicketylemon:

Shoplifting actually isn’t a radical statement.

You DO actually hurt the low-wage workers, not the billionaire CEO/Owners of the company. 

Source: I’ve had my paycheck, hours, and job cut due to shoplifting on more than one occasion. I’m not the only one.

Also, you know who they blame first for large numbers of shoplifters frequenting the store or lots of product going missing? The staff. You know what they do if they think a few people on staff might be stealing? They replace all of them. Regardless of whether they can prove it. Yes. That’s totally legal.

Stop acting like your shoplifting is some radical anti-capitalist statement. It isn’t. You’re only hurting the very people you claim to support. SOME stores have a certain amount they expect to lose to shoplifting, but not all of them do. It can vary even within a company.

And yes, stealing food when your hungry IS different from stealing $500 worth of makeup because you wanted it.

Yup









joannaorf:

Sisterhood

5/5/18

Athens, Greece

©

joannaorf





driflloon:

beverages: for v magazine mar. 2018









violentwavesofemotion:

“…that sacred earth that is your body.”

Mevlana Jelaluddin Rumi, tr. by Daniel Ladinsky, from “That Lives in Us.”





notonyourbarricade:

It was a huge disappointment as a child to fall in love with the stars and then find out how much math it requires to get anywhere near them.