RESOURCES FOR POSES
Line of Action
JustSketch.Me
PoseManiacs
Human-Anatomy-For-Artist.com
MagicPoser
MIXAMO
Pose Archives
Bodies in Motion
Posemy.art
ReferenceAngle
CroquisCafe

oozey mess
YOU ARE THE REASON

blake kathryn

tannertan36
we're not kids anymore.

@theartofmadeline
Today's Document
Jules of Nature
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
RMH

pixel skylines
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Origami Around
Mike Driver
One Nice Bug Per Day

Kaledo Art

titsay
KIROKAZE

No title available
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from India

seen from United States
seen from T1

seen from China

seen from Türkiye
seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from Ukraine

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
@chamakalubi
RESOURCES FOR POSES
Line of Action
JustSketch.Me
PoseManiacs
Human-Anatomy-For-Artist.com
MagicPoser
MIXAMO
Pose Archives
Bodies in Motion
Posemy.art
ReferenceAngle
CroquisCafe
Love this
Hi Instagram family if you love my page be sure to go and follow @kalubi_official you will get updates on all things Kalubi, as well as where to get yourself or a loved one something special. Check it out now www.evelynkalubi.com #kalubi #fashion #african #art #instaShop #instafashion #instaart
#BLM #Fergueson
Let's normalize nappy edges.
Yes because NO edge control or gel “slicks” my curly, frizzy, nappy ass edges down. ☺️
My shit poof up as soon as I walk out the door. 😂
AND👏🏾THAT'S👏🏾WHY👏🏾WE👏🏾NEED👏🏾TO👏🏾NORMALIZE👏🏾NAPPY👏🏾EDGES. MY👏🏾SHIT👏🏾IS👏🏾NEVER👏🏾LAID.👏🏾JUST👏🏾OUT👏🏾HERE👏🏾WOKE👏🏾AF!!!!
what we need to start doing is stop paying attention to these silly mediocre ass music niggas and giving our coin and attention to these black women currently makin good ass music thats actually about shit
here are some underrated black female artists (add more as you reblog)
kelela (x, x) nao (x, x) abra (x, x, x, x) chloe x halle (x, x, x) jamila woods (x) noname (x) little simz (x, x, x, x) junglepussy (x, x)
Joyce Wrice Leikeli47 Jasmine Sullivan Dreezy Victoria Monet
Njena reddd foxxx
Hollie Cook (her dad was in the Sex Pistols and she was in a band with johnny rottens daughter)
Mapei (she’s from Sweden!)
Lion Babe
Raven Lenae
BOSCO
Kari Faux
Eryn Allen Kane
Kilo Kish
Rahel
Lolawolf (Zoe Kravits!)
Dominique Young Unique
TT The Artist
Saint Cava
Iberia
Laura Mvula
*also katiegotbandz
Babe heaven (the lead singer is black)
GC Lil Nya
Princess Nokia
BEL Inspire
Ebony Bones
Yanna Eli
also please support ur local black artists
RIIOTTT on soundcloud is really fun and cute
TBH this is an A1 list and u should check em out no matter what music ur into TRUST ME LIKE THIS POST FOR LATER WHEN U WANNA FIND NEW MUSIC OK
Good ass list
Dont forget Izzy Bizu!!!! Her music is AMAZING!!
Listen to Lizzo!!! She’s fat, black and preaches self-love with some fire bars and great vocals/production.
Ella Mai
Courtney Ariel
Jacquea Mae Anquinque Wingfield Jasmine Tate
The stories are of unspeakable cruelty.
Force yourself to NOT scroll down.
This is difficult to read:
“I was severely punished by a board cut full of holes to raise the blisters, then I was whipped with a strap to burst the blisters, which were then salted and peppered,” Thomas Brown said. “This burned me very badly.”
The South Carolina slave had escaped and hidden in nearby woods but had been found by bloodhounds and brought back.
“And I never tried to run away again.”
His very words. His story.
Brown’s powerful telling of his treatment as a slave, along with that of more than 200 other former slaves, can be found online because of the work of John B. Cade Sr. and Southern University.
When Cade was on the faculties of two historically black universities in the first half of the 20th century, he sent students to collect stories from former slaves. The narratives are in the Southern University library that is in Cade’s name.
For all practical purposes, though, the stories could have been locked in a vault.
“The collection has been sitting in the library for years, and no one attempted to do anything about it,” said Angela V. Proctor, university archivist and digital librarian at the John B. Cade Library.
That changed three years ago when Southern posted the narratives online. Now, anyone with internet access can read what the slaves had to say.
That’s prompted calls to Proctor from researchers in several countries interested in learning what former American slaves said about their lives.
Cade began collecting the stories after he arrived at Southern in 1929 as registrar and as principal at Southern University Lab School. He continued while on the faculty at Prairie View A&M from 1931-39 and after returning to Southern in 1939 as dean and director of extension services, Proctor said. Cade retired in 1961 and died in 1970. The collection at Southern includes interviews Cade collected while at Prairie View, Proctor said.
Part of Cade’s motivation was to counter white historians’ suggestions that slaves had not minded their status, Proctor said. Few narratives in Southern’s collection support the idea that slavery was a benign institution.
Cruelty, particularly from the overseers hired to manage slaves, is a frequent theme.
South Carolina slave Louis Bishop said that to maximize productivity, punishment for infractions would be delayed until rainy days, when the slaves wouldn’t be working.
“My master was so cruel to his slaves that they were almost crazy at times,” said Bill Collins, an Alabama slave born in 1846. “He would buckle us across a log and whip us until we were unable to walk for three days. On Sunday, we would go to the barn and pray to God to fix some way for us to be freed from our mean masters.”
The slaves made clear they had virtually no control over the most basic decisions. They needed permission to marry, a permission that some owners declined to give. In some cases, owners decided which slaves could wed and to whom. It was common for families to be broken up as some members were sold to other owners.
“My mother was sold away from me,” said Collins. “I was so lonesome without her that I would often go about my work and cry and look for her return, as I was told by some of the slaves that she would be brought back to me, but she never came back.”
Jourden Luper, born in Charleston, South Carolina, ended up in Texas with no memory of a mother or father, who were sold separately before he turned 2, his grandmother told him.
“The worst thing about slavery was selling the slaves on the auction block like they were cattle,” said William Haynes, a Virginia-born slave who was moved to Texas.
Common themes from the narratives are that most slaves lived in simple, dirt-floor cabins, wore homespun clothing and were forced to work hard — especially field slaves. They would rise well before dawn, eat, feed and milk cows, then report to the fields so they could begin work as soon as it was light enough to see.
“The women, as well as the men, had to work in the fields chopping and picking cotton,” Haynes said. “The only pay was a whipping.”
Some masters forbade any religious practice, forcing slaves to sneak into the woods to pray and sing or risk being caught in their quarters. Other masters took slaves with them to church.
“They would pray saying, ‘O Lord, lift the yoke of bondage of us that we may serve God under our own vine and fig tree. And, O Lord, control Ole Master’s temper so he will not be so mean to us,’” wrote Esther Lane-Thompson of her interview with Mark Slater, an Alabama-born slave who was taken to Washington County, Texas.
Word of emancipation arrived, with tragic results for a slave named Klora, who was told of it by a white boy.
Klora’s master saw her talking to the boy and asked if he’d said anything about emancipation. She denied it.
“Then, her master tied her across a barrel and whipped her until she died,” said Luper, the South Carolina slave who ended up in Texas. “The master’s girls begged for Klora, but it did no good. He then whipped the boy until he died. The white boy’s mother cried and begged for her son’s life, but it did no good. That was a very miserable crime.”
Slaves who had kind masters celebrated their emancipation.
“We were not cruelly treated,” said Jake Delaney. “But after freedom, I could see that slavery was the worst thing that a race could experience.”
Thanks to Southern University for digitizing and saving this piece of history.
“That was a long time ago, just get over it”. I refuse. Boost this shit.
I’ve never been happier seeing a picture in my life
Y'all gotta take this down 😂😂😂😭
WHO DID THIS SHIT 😂😂😂
Keep yo rich ass in the da house!
Link: https://www.buzzfeed.com/amphtml/amberjamieson/this-group-of-women-is-helping-to-fix-the-hair-and-spirits
Beautiful.
More of this please.
#Ally Repost from @killermike
Very bright and stunning living room in the heart of Mexico City, Mexico
via reddit
Lovely
bitch ass nazis