248 posts
Mi tío/padrino fue una persona inconstante en mi infancia, pero muy entretenida cuando estaba presente. Para una fiesta me regalo un libro de cuentos. Grande. Un libro de cuentos GRANDE. Cada cuento tiene (aun lo tengo) ilustraciones de artistas diferentes. Eso me volvió loca. Analizar los distintos estilos y ver saber desde la guata que unos no me gustaban nada y otros me siguen obsesionando hasta hoy. Son unas ilustraciones hermosísimas, tanto así, que las empece a copiar. Y resulta que no estaba mal. Y mi hermana lo miro, y tampoco estaba mal. Y de repente lo decidí. Yo voy a ser una persona que dibuja. Fin. Hoy soy diseñadora.
Muchas partes importantes de quien soy hoy nacieron de decisiones random que tome de niña.
Nonstick broom
"Chat what do I do the guy I hate just confessed their unyielding love to me"
Pride and prejudice screenshot redraw but not really, I drew them like how I felt like it ¯_(ツ)_/¯
-Hylas and the Nymphs-
from @nyahilist on ig .
please no halloween posts just yet. there’s still 2 months left
I made a pair of socks just to use up some leftover yarn. Made up the pattern myself 😊
Taken in 2000 about a year into our relationship.
Taken in 2024 (last weekend). Didn’t quite get the pose or positioning right, but hey, we’re older and our memory ain’t what it used to be!
Costume design by Riccardo Tisci, Givenchy’s creative director, for a ballet of Maurice Ravel’s 17-minute composition Bolero, based on the Spanish dance, a collaboration between Marina Abramovic and Belgian choreographers, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and Damien Jalet; photographed for Dazed & Confused July 2013
Speaking of his initial costume inspirations, Riccardo Tisci said, “I wanted to create something very strong, very sexual. And very me. I was inspired by romance. The skeleton design is very dramatic but the nude colour of the fabric has a sense of romance- I wanted the dancers to feel naked. For me, the skeleton balanced death and beauty. I decided not to use materials associated with classic ballet, such as feathers and beading. I wanted to keep it minimal but also strong, because the bolero is about jealousy and intensity. I began with the black cape, because it has been key to my career. I imagined the men and women turning in the cape. I imagined the moment they would remove the cape, and underneath would be a nude catsuit in illusion tulle embroidered with a lace skeleton. They shed several layers as they dance, just like the lifecycle of animals or flowers losing their petals. They became these moving skeletons, strong and fragile at the same time.”
spotify is raising prices again here's the apk that gives you premium for free
Although often taken for granted, Google Earth is an incredible feat accomplished by mankind that people 300 years ago would have considered completely mental.
This is one of those true, declassified government things that always sounds made up but one of the things Henry Kissinger did with his career was use the CIA to help turn small, prosperous socialist nations into fascist dictatorships just to keep those nations powerless and possibly to keep socialist systems *looking* doomed and futile to the American public, like maybe just to scare Americans out of demanding better infrastructure or universal income. Yes it sounds like an insane conspiracy theory a maniac would invent. It also happened multiple times and several generations of people around the world are still living in misery because of it.
wish my life was like a 90's movie where all my friends work in record stores and bookshops and coffee shops and we see really cool bands in small little clubs and get breakfast together and like hang out on roofs and shit
obsessed with this 1850 embroidery pattern for a repeating coral pattern
What would you even use this on? Who was the target audience? There’s definitely context here that I don’t have yet and I love it so much, it reminds me of @vincentbriggs’ teapot crinoid patterns!
I’m obsessed with this man
he did it again