sometimes you mix the past with the present and your happiness disappears.b • 24 • she/her • latina
295 posts
kitchen tables in the films of éric rohmer
Glaze inspo ceramics
Vintage Avon Frisky Friends Perfume Bottle
Yufu City, Oita Prefecture, Japan // みずなし
I love personalization. I love stickers on water bottles and on laptops. I love shitty marker drawing on the toes of converse. I love hand embroidered doodles on jeans. I love posters on walls. I love knick knacks on shelves. I love jewelry with goofy charms. I love when people take things and make them theirs.
me after i get home from school
𖦹°. ‧bag pins & buttons part2.
― Frank Herbert, Dune
button pngs ! credit not necessary for pngs! like or reblog to use, don't repost as your own please.
SIMEON ÖQUIST (detail)
"For women, only one standard of female beauty is sanctioned: the girl. The great advantage men have is that our culture allows two standards of male beauty: the boy and the man. The beauty of a boy resembles the beauty of a girl. In both sexes it is a fragile kind of beauty and flourishes naturally only in the early part of the life-cycle. Happily, men are able to accept themselves under another standard of good looks — heavier, rougher, more thickly built. A man does not grieve when he loses the smooth, unlined, hairless skin of a boy. For he has only exchanged one form of attractiveness for another: the darker skin of a man’s face, roughened by daily shaving, showing the marks of emotion and the normal lines of age. There is no equivalent of this second standard for women. The single standard of beauty for women dictates that they must go on having clear skin. Every wrinkle, every line, every gray hair, is a defeat. No wonder that no boy minds becoming a man, while even the passage from girlhood to early womanhood is experienced by many women as their downfall, for all women are trained to want to continue looking like girls." — Excerpt from Susan Sontag's 1978 essay The Double Standard of Aging
― John Steinbeck, East of Eden
carop.bala
was testing something out for an animation project. check out this thing
Jean Béraud. 1848-1935.
national geographic (1959)