Stéphane Rolland Spring 2022 Couture

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
taylor price
Show & Tell

JVL

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
dirt enthusiast
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
DEAR READER
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
AnasAbdin
Peter Solarz
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Andulka
noise dept.
we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever

@theartofmadeline
Cosimo Galluzzi
RMH
Stranger Things

seen from Belgium
seen from Russia
seen from Malaysia
seen from France

seen from Malaysia
seen from South Korea
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Australia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia

seen from Canada
seen from Austria
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
@aveces-yo
Stéphane Rolland Spring 2022 Couture
pretty rude that i’m not small enough to sit under mushrooms
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bxd5wsXBFCp/
A criminal investigation, Japan, 1958
Photographer Yukichi Watabe documented the investigation of a grisly murder that had occurred in Mito (Ibaraki Prefecture) in January 1958. Watabe closely followed two police detectives, one from the Metropolitan Police Department and the other local. Their investigation involved stakeouts around downtown areas of Tokyo, going undercover at a train station, canvassing different neighbourhoods looking for clues, and visiting the tannery where the victim had once worked.
“I like shots of hands. Anyone who saw Pride and Prejudice will recognize my slight interest for hands.” - Joe Wright
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE dir. Joe Wright
“In a 1994 Harvard study that examined people who had radically changed their lives, for instance, researchers found that some people had remade their habits after a personal tragedy, such as a divorce or a life-threatening illness. Others changed after they saw a friend go through something awful, the same way that Dungy’s players watched him struggle.
Just as frequently, however, there was no tragedy that preceded people’s transformations. Rather, they changed because they were embedded in social groups that made change easier. One woman said her entire life shifted when she signed up for a psychology class and met a wonderful group. “It opened a Pandora’s box,” the woman told researchers. “I could not tolerate the status quo any longer. I had changed in my core.” Another man said that he found new friends among whom he could practice being gregarious. “When I do make the effort to overcome my shyness, I feel that it is not really me acting, that it’s someone else,” he said. But by practicing with his new group, it stopped feeling like acting. He started to believe he wasn’t shy, and then, eventually, he wasn’t anymore. When people join groups where change seems possible, the potential for that change to occur becomes more real. For most people who overhaul their lives, there are no seminal moments or life-altering disasters. There are simply communities⏤sometimes of just one other person⏤who make change believable.
One woman told researchers her life transformed after a day spent cleaning toilets⏤and after weeks of discussing with the rest of the cleaning crew whether she should leave her husband.
“Change occurs among other people,” one of the psychologists involved in the study, Todd Heatherton, told me. “It seems real when we can see it in other people’s eyes.”
The precise mechanisms of belief are little understood. No one is certain why a group encountered in a psychology class can convince a woman that everything is different, or why Dungy’s team came together after their coach’s son passed away. Plenty of people talk to friends about unhappy marriages and never leave their spouse; lots of teams watch their coaches experience adversity and never gel.
But we do know that for habits to permanently change, people must believe that change is feasible. The same process that makes AA so effective⏤the power of a group to teach individuals how to believe⏤happens whenever people come together to help one another change. Belief is easier when it occurs within a community.”
⏤ The Power of Habit, Charles Duhigg
home is the first grave
unknown // catherine lacey // chen chen // silas denver melvin // aloha from hell, richard kadrey // courtney love prays to oregon // unknown // st. lucy’s home for girl’s raised by wolves // x // taylor swift’s “my tears ricochet” // this post @ceemetery
my kofi
I need this Yoshitomo Nara flip clock
homesinsweden
Suddhasattwa Basu Two Kingfisher 2009 Watercolour on paper 35 x 27 in. 90.5 cm x 69.5 cm.
I always get so fucking mad when I remember that it’s actually a 16-year-old Algerian girl who influenced BOTH Picasso and Matisse. and. No one gives a rat’s ass about her work which was very focused on women and nature. History -or people dare I say- didn’t bother to remember her name because she was a young Algerian woman and no one cares about Maghrebi/Arab women. unlike P*casso & M*tisse who both became legends, almost gods both during their lives and after their deaths, no one knows her.
Her name was Baya Mahieddine.
Andrew Wyeth (American, 1917-2009), Perpetual Care, 1961. Drybrush on paper, 73.7 x 59.1 cm.
ottessa moshfegh
走るアヒル
movies + handwritten letters
To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (2018) The Handmaiden (2016) Back to the Future (1985) Becoming Jane (2007) Bright Star (2009) Little Forest (2018) Moonrise Kingdom (2012) Bajirao Mastani (2015) P.S. I Love You (2007) The Favourite (2018)