*insert emotional quote* haha #watercolor #sakurakoi
todays bird

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

#extradirty
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
$LAYYYTER
EXPECTATIONS

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
KIROKAZE

No title available
art blog(derogatory)

Product Placement
trying on a metaphor
macklin celebrini has autism

pixel skylines
Three Goblin Art
hello vonnie
Stranger Things

if i look back, i am lost
Jules of Nature
seen from France

seen from Malaysia

seen from Spain

seen from United States
seen from Moldova
seen from Spain

seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from South Africa
seen from Bangladesh
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from Germany
seen from Saudi Arabia
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@caldevera
*insert emotional quote* haha #watercolor #sakurakoi
If Only
“ I love how proud you are for having me as reflected by your courage to hold my hands in public.”
Set of illustrations I did for Explore magazine’s February issue. If y'all looking for a chill place or food trip spots, I highly suggest you visit these places.
AMAZING
You only love me when there's alcohol involved.
Don't hurt others with your broken pieces.
Newton
I've kissed girls. I've kissed boys. I've been in a relationship. I've been in love. And I have loved. But I've also been through a breakup. I've also caused one. I've been in love triangles, and also been the third party. I've turned down people, but I've also had my heart so stepped on by people who have no idea. I've hurt, and I've been hurt. Love hurts. But when love works, love is amazing. There's a reason for all the love songs. But as Newton said, every action has an equal and opposite reaction. And so love can also hurt. Love can also kill. If you want to experience the great feeling of love, you have to be willing to experience the great feeling of pain as well. Others go through life guarding their heart. And sure, they don't get hurt, but they also don't get to experience love. You can't have everything. And I'm okay with that. I love Love , and so I learn to love its partner Pain.
Fall in love, get heart broken, and don’t get over them, not until you’ve created art that lives on longer than the love you had.
Scott McGoldrick (via wordsnquotes)
friend: i'm here for you if you ever need me!
me: *needs friend*
me: i probably shouldn't bother them
"No, my 10 year old son is not looking for a girlfriend. He likes boys." In the beginning of this semester, the school of our children sent home a list of extracurricular clubs available for students. Our younger son chose a board games club, our older son chose Zumba. He loves singing and dancing, and we were all happy. As the semester passed, they both enjoyed their clubs, but the choice of the older one always received the same reaction, something like “He’s smart. I bet he’s the only boy there and he can choose the girl he wants.” The first time this happened I was shocked, because I had never thought like that. In our family, we don’t exactly follow the gender roles. My husband is the one that stays home and cooks. We have three sons and what they want to do is simply what they want to do. We accept them. It doesn’t matter if it’s not “male like”. We asked our older boy if being the only boy there made him uncomfortable, he said “No” and that was it. But people’s reactions bothered me. My older son is gay. Yes, he’s only 10, but he identifies himself as gay since he was 7. So this idea that he was there only for the girls bothered me. For years, we’ve been dealing with a good number of shocked reactions for our son’s sexual orientation, but I never stop being bothered by people assuming that my son’s straight. At some point, I got so bothered that I started to correct people. "No", I say, "he’s not interested in girls. He’s gay. He says that girls are his friends." So the reaction is "Oh, really? How does he know that? He’s so young…" These people don’t see the contradiction in their words. They assumed my son was straight and wanted to be with girls, but he’s too young to know he likes boys. Assumptions are dangerous. This, in particular, implies that is something wrong with my son, and there isn’t. He should be exactly who he is. I remember my first crush. He was a friend of my uncle. I think I was 6 or 7 and I used to follow him everywhere. It wasn’t sexual. I just knew I wanted to be around him. I see how my son blushes when he talks about a boy he likes. He’s discovering what he likes, like I did. Before gay kids had the opportunity to be raised in a non homophobic environment and with out people in their lives, their crushes that to be kept as a secret. But my son doesn’t have a secret. I think that it’s important to speak up, correct people when they assume my son is straight. I have to say “No, this doesn’t apply to my son.” Because kids don’t become gay by magic when they hit puberty. Sexual orientation is something deeper. It’s something that has nothing to do with sex, but with love and attraction. And it’s beautiful. That’s nothing wrong with it.
(via milkshakesandmixtapes)
at what point in your life, do you not consider the consequences :|
Don’t do that. Don’t skip stages in your life. You’re 19, kiss a few boys and wear your heart on your sleeve. There will come a time when you’re 39 and stuck in a suit, wondering why the hell you were so eager to grow up in the first place.
(via peachbliss)
You Aren’t Boring I Just Suck At Conversations I’m Sorry: a novel by me
I’m Not Ignoring You I Just Don’t Know What To Say: a sequel by me
I Feel Like I have Nothing Interesting To Say So I Don’t Say Anything At All And I’m Really Sorry Don’t Stop Talking To Me: the trilogy.
Bringing Blank Pages to Life with @maude_alta
To see more photographs of Maude’s precision cutting, follow @maude_alta on Instagram.
“I love the feel of paper, the immense possibility represented by every blank page,” says paper-carving artist Maude Alta White (@maude_alta), who lives in New York’s Hudson Valley. “I want to have a conversation with the paper, not on the paper.”
Maude begins her pieces with a pencil drawing, meticulously planning the positive and negative space before wielding a craft knife. “Cutting paper is very meditative, and I like the weight and decision of making every cut precise and meaningful,” she says. Creating portraits of women is especially challenging, Maude explains, because she has to connect the eyes, nose and mouth to the overall piece. “That’s why they all have hair blowing across their faces!”
Maude says she always starts in one corner and works her way across to avoid damaging sections as she goes. Some pieces take weeks to finish. “There is nothing quite as wonderful as holding up a piece I’ve cut and being able to see the world through it,” she says.
The Lookup Club
The overwhelming symmetry and density of Hong Kong’s vertical developments shot using my handy iPhone. Let’s just describe this beauty as a perfectly contained chaos.