Abanico

PR's Tumblrdome
art blog(derogatory)
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祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Love Begins

Kiana Khansmith
Xuebing Du
wallacepolsom
sheepfilms
Keni

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trying on a metaphor
Monterey Bay Aquarium
DEAR READER

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Stranger Things
$LAYYYTER

tannertan36
taylor price
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seen from Slovakia
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Abanico
Sorry will stop spamming about it lol
Émile Vernon (detail)
White-tail Fawns
male euthalia adonia | source
Tea Gown
c.1903-1905
Belgium
Royal Museums of Arts & History, Brussels, Belgium (Object Number: C.481)
Lesser Atlas Moth (Samia cf. wangi, Saturniidae)
Venus's Cabbages
Watercolor On Black Paper
2022, 11"x 14"
Pink Peonies
Britain in Pictures series
The books were designed to boost morale but perhaps also record the British way of life in case the Germans completed their European campaign by successfully crossing the English Channel. The books were slim volumes with distinctive elegant covers, but it was the star-studded array of authors that made the series really special.
George Orwell wrote about the British people, Cecil Beaton wrote about English photography, the great poet and printer Francis Meynell wrote about English books, John Betjeman (who penned the immortal line” Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Slough” in 1937) wrote about cities and towns, Graham Greene wrote about dramatists, the doyen of sports journalists Neville Cardus wrote about cricket and Edith Sitwell wrote about women. Some of the authors have faded in obscurity but they were all experts in their field during those dark days of World War II.
A wide variety of subjects were covered from battlefields to boxing, clocks to mountaineering, butterflies to farm animals, and from waterways and canals to maps and map-makers. In all, there were were 132 titles. The books also covered the Commonwealth – John Buchan’s wife, Lady Tweedsmuir wrote about Canada while Ngaio Marsh and R M Burdon wrote about New Zealand.