1. biomerge:

    tomfordvelvetorchid:

    barbieprivilege:

    literally lindsay

    Nicole

    Paris honestly

    (Source: confessionistt, via xiahe)

     

  2. klanced:

    Not a shitpost, but some advice for my younger followers:

    Try to eat healthy. I’m not saying you should live in whole foods, but try to get in the habit of having fruit or veggies whenever you can. You might be fifteen and feel invincible chugging three cans of energy drinks, but trust me. In a few years your body is gonna be craving all the healthy shit you didn’t eat as a kid.

    Don’t romanticize staying up late. It’s not healthy. You may score brownie points with your friends if you pull an all-nighter for no discernible reason, but your body will hate you. Believe me when I say everything catches back up to you by the time you’re in your late teens. If you fuck up your sleep patterns while you’re young, you’ve pretty much screwed yourself over for the next few years.

    Trust your gut. If you think someone is creepy, keep your distance. Even if your friends insist they’re an okay person, keep your distance. Better safe than sorry. And most of the time, you’ll end up right.

    There’s no point in teasing people for their appearance. There’s no point at all. We all have to get up at like 6am to learn about things we don’t care about, let people wear whatever the hell they want. Shut your mouth and move on.

    If someone older than you tries to talk to you out of nowhere, stay on your goddamn guard. Even if they’re a person you greatly admire, even if you think they’re the coolest person ever- You are under no obligation to humor them. If they start asking invasive questions (about your age, your sexual habits, anything that raises Warning Bells) then you need to get the hell out of there. Stop responding, either gradually or all at once. Whatever works for you. You’re not being rude- you’re looking out for yourself.

    Be kind to people younger than you. You were just like them not too long ago.

    (Source: justiceforallura, via immaplatypus)

     
  3. chandelyer:

    Elie Saab f/w 2018-2019 rtw

     
  4. ktnp0:

    Baile Style!

    —-

    Reprint and Use without permission is prohibited.(please don’t delete this text)

    (via bulbagarden)

     
  5. yinza:

    I cannot take credit for this pun but please consider

    crowchet.

    Prints available through Redbubble and Society6.

    (via onceuponacrochet)

     
  6. tiddie:

    tiddie:

    i’m kinkshaming

    image
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    #architectsbelike

    (via martinscorgayse)

     

  7. some really beautiful african architecture because honestly this site is so western-centric

    taraneecooking:

    misshoneywheeler:

    softnbratty:

    itsabigjaz:

    elsinore-snores:

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    mako

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    unknown

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    cameroon

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    burkina faso

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    mali

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    Ndebele

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    burkina faso


    please add more if you can!

    these are SO BEAUTIFUL

    MALI IS MY FAVORITE. I LOVE THE COLORS 😍😍😍😍😍

    The rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, Ethiopia

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    The Great Temple of Ramesses II at Abu Simbel, Egypt

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    The Nubian Pyramids at Meroe, Sudan

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    Stone Town, Zanzibar, Tanzania

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    Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria, Egypt, a commemoration of the destroyed Library at Alexandria

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    Bosjes Chapel, South Africa

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    The Gando School by Diébédo Francis Kéré, Gando, Burkina Faso

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    The Dyeji Building, Luanda, Angola

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    @naming-day

     
  8.  
  9. 2dnd:

    Brazilian graphic designer and illustrator Butcher Billy got the idea of turning famous love hits into book covers of horror master Stephen King. 

    Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart,” The Smiths, “Head Over Heels” by Tears For Fears and many others were portrayed in a very unusual way.

    “This series imagines an alternate universe where some of the most desperate and tragic romantic songs in the ‘70s and’ 80s are actually books written by Stephen King. The concept is to look at the dark side of love by the vision of pop culture, bringing aspects of its classic stories to play the true meaning of the songs - this can be completely subverted or stressed strangeness, while paying tribute to the vintage design of the original covers,” Butcher writes on his Behance.

    @taraneecooking

    (via godblum)

     

  10. mariesbookblog:

    faded-mind:

    theangelshavethetimeturner:

    invite-me-to-your-memories:

    i understand the historical reasons why English is the most common language

    but if I was writing a speculative fiction novel

    and I said “the language that most people learn as a second language, usually for professional reasons, is also the only one with a spelling system so terrible that spelling words correctly is a broadcasted competition

    you’d be like “extremely unrealistic 0/10”

    i never thought of this, do other languages not have spelling bees?

    #no we don’t

    What

    @peanutscratch

    (via momma-rose)