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Madame Sherri's Chesterfield, NH
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If you were living in Paris during the years that followed World War II and liked to party, you’d better have known Boris Vian. In 1950, he wrote the original guidebook to bohemian Paris and pioneered a movement which brought back the city’s “joie de vivre” that had been lost during the German occupation. Along with Jean Paul-Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, Boris…
Lose yourself amongst these serene views of isolation and decay.
Nemo Soda (DeviantArt)
Funny, weird and WTF images that will make your day better.
31 Artworks by B A H M A N, Saatchi Art Artist
“‘cupid’ by xy magazine (june 2001)”
here are four of the things I had the most fun drawing in 2018! hoping I get to have even more fun in 2019!!
cornflakesdoesart: althought I wanted to finish these while it was winter , it’s still snowing here so here, some warmly dressed folks!
These are the spirited women who communicate the unspeakable.
Li Wei is a Beijing-based artist that creates jaw-dropping scenes using mirrors, metal wires, scaffolding, and acrobatics. Check out his website here.
Meanwhile, in France…...
CafeMom is a supportive community where moms can get parenting tips and updates, real talk, laughs, and the latest celebrity news all in one place
Akiya Kageichi is a Japanese illustrator who calls himself Golden Gravel, a name which may refer to Japanese rock gardens. His sinister jesters, lazy rulers and clandestine warriors are set within scenes full of chaotic imagery. Astrological symbols, particularly moons, are heavily prominent, suggesting the mysterious forces of dark nights are at work. In a single plane, objects morph, creating dynamic and active scenes. Kageichi reveals hidden underworlds and secret futures, in which sorcery and witchcraft pull the strings and determine what happens in the real world.
Jazz man, from Cavalier Magazine, 1965
Akiya-Kageichi - https://twitter.com/Akiya_kageichi
Francis Ford Coppola’s wildly ambitious take on Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness premiered at the Cannes film festival 40 years ago – and won the Palme d’Or. Next month, recently discovered on-set photographs by Chas Gerretsen will be shown for the first time at KINO Rotterdam
The warm autumn sunlight falls through the windows and creates the perfect condition for these ferns to flourish.
THEN: Supermodel Naomi Campbell covered the March 2019 issue of British Vogue , her first under Edward Enninful as editor-in-chief. Enninful set a historic milestone in 2017 as Condé Nast’s Vogue’s first male editor for any Vogue in its then 101-years history. Edward was well-known — and we
Download this Cartoon Apple Core, Cartoon Clipart, Red Apple, Rotten Apple PNG clipart image with transparent background for free. Pngtree provides millions of free png, vectors, clipart images and psd graphic resources for designers.| 1163643
“らくがき”
#GWはフォロワーさんが増えるらしい うちの子を好きにな〜る〜
Our parents weren't always parents. Yes, I know, that sounds self-explanatory, but let that sink in. Before these people were changing our diapers, they were young, wild, and free to do whatever they desired. In many cases, their old lives were even more impressive than our current ones. Building motorcycles, stopping bank robberies... It's one thing to hear those stories, but it's another to see photographic proof.
What is architecture's purpose if it is not to create habitable spaces? We tend to conceive buildings in architectural, structural, environmental, economic,
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Twitter user Alina Pleskova found a book on the curb and decided to rescue it, bringing it back home with her. She couldn't help but share the photos...
A side-blog for my love of tabletop Role Playing Games. Mostly reblogs - rules, monsters, art, inspiration, worldbuilding, etc. Also RPG related kickstarters of note. And dice. Lots of dice.
Akiya Kageichi is a Japanese illustrator who calls himself Golden Gravel, a name which may refer to Japanese rock gardens. His sinister jesters, lazy rulers and clandestine warriors are set within scenes full of chaotic imagery. Astrological symbols, particularly moons, are heavily prominent, suggesting the mysterious forces of dark nights are at work. In a single plane, objects morph, creating dynamic and active scenes. Kageichi reveals hidden underworlds and secret futures, in which sorcery and witchcraft pull the strings and determine what happens in the real world.
Pinhole specialist Justin Quinnell explains the beauty of photography using the simplest equipment.