"Twilight on the Hudson River" (1940s) by Leslie Ragan (1897-1972). - source Urban Relics.
Claire Keane

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH
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occasionally subtle
ojovivo

#extradirty

izzy's playlists!
Sade Olutola
Misplaced Lens Cap
trying on a metaphor
NASA
h

JBB: An Artblog!

Andulka
hello vonnie
Show & Tell

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seen from Argentina

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@aytvill
"Twilight on the Hudson River" (1940s) by Leslie Ragan (1897-1972). - source Urban Relics.
🌈 | Genderfluid Soap Bars
The Time Capsule 70'S
70s Dinner Party
Unisex sewing patterns for your gender neutral wardrobe!
Gender neutral patterns to sew your own androgynous wardrobe
Oliver & Olivia by Korin Hunjak
A short comic about trans and genderfluid identities, published in the Slovenian comic magazine Stripburger #83, and in a Croatian queer zine Bučkviriš #2. Thanks for looking! 🌈
Last day to grab a print! Link in bio ✨
@justdavina
Love her dress so much!!! 🥰💖🥰💖🥰💖🏳️⚧️🏳️⚧️🏳️⚧️
Self Portrait
by
Jane Mozely
Berchtesgaden, Germany
Madeira, Portugal
Faroe Islands
Hamburg, Germany
Americans Explain Why Public Transport Can't Work
addressing myself as different gender?
my gender fluidity came after I came to myself, on 50+ year of my life. first it was like “am I trans? wait, what?”, but very soon it clicked like a key in a keyhole, and locked in the slot. and then came trans fluidity — some days and weeks I suffer from dysphoria, and other days I continue in my assigned at birth everything, “as if it’s normal”. Life turned into pendulum swings I can’t predict…
but as Columbo said across his character, “oh, there is one more thing”. Finnish language has no sex implied — everybody is hän and there is no she or he. Leave alone, there is no sex embedded in cases and rest of language cf. Spanish. English has she/he, but it’s generally still neutral. But my childhood language has it all — if I talk about myself as woman, all verbs and adjectives and everything else is in feminine form. And it brings me joy and happiness.
Only my compatriots here are generally conservative. So I have to keep my tongue under hard control when I make small talks to my local fellows. And when it’s ‘male week’ — I still use it as it was last 50+ years. Once or twice my tongue slipped and I had to smile and continue without pause. But I do hope one day I can switch to “the one side of the street”. Wonder what will happen to my language fluidity by then…