Moon earrings

gracie abrams

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Stranger Things
sheepfilms
Sweet Seals For You, Always
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Product Placement

pixel skylines
Cosimo Galluzzi
Today's Document
wallacepolsom
đȘŒ
trying on a metaphor
will byers stan first human second

#extradirty
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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Origami Around
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
tumblr dot com
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@claudioallendes
Moon earrings
When running late to the wedding reception đđœ . . #wedding #jasonandjesse #allsuitedup #đ°đŒ (at The Glenmore Inn & Convention Centre)
This is for the girl who stopped me today and said that she loved my style : @yxungml Ps; @harvard you are so pretty â€ïžđ
Happy birthday to my belove mum! â€ïžđđ°đ #birthday #funinthesun #fam #Mexico #2016 #balloon #mum
Last night we had to make up for 8 years lost đđ #fam #friends #cancun #mexico #drunkadventures #tourisme #mexihoe (at CancĂșn, Mexico)
Cancun + family = â€ïž #Cancun #Mexico #2016 #funinthebeach #fam #funinthesun (at Royal Solaris Cancun)
Marry the man you hang out with all day and still have 100% battery on your phone when you leave.
21! đđđ #21 #birthday #balloons #420 #blessed #yyc #adulthood (at Calgary, Alberta)
Meet the artist honoring traditional black hairstyles with incredible braids (Fusion.net)
Shani Crowe is an interdisciplinary artist from Chicagoâs south side. The product of an Art rich, Afrocentric upbringing, Shani creates work that is centered on keeping the proverbial flame of cultural coiffure, adornment, and beauty ritual, as they relate to the diasporic African. She seeks to connect with people through her artistic practice to convey a message of love, cultural identity and Black unity and to create a variety of visual and wearable art, prompting a meaningful exchange between the artist and viewer/client. (3Arts)
Crowe on âWhy do you think itâs important to preserve black hairstyles?â:
Braiding is a sacred art in a lot of ways because itâs so rich in traditionâa lot of times we donât really understand how much it means. Iâve always done hair and there were times when [braids] werenât really as popular and I didnât do them as much, but [now] all these white girls are coming out wearing cornrows. Someone asked me, âDo you do boxer braids?â and I was like, âYou mean box braids? What the hell are boxer braids?â And she was like, âThose braids that Kim Kardashian wears.â Kim Kardashian just has straight-back braids and they arenât even done that well, they looked pretty popped, and popped in Chicago is not a good thing. Because [braids] are coming out in pop culture and being exploited as a trend in the fashion scene, I think itâs important for me to honor them, before thereâs a time when people donât even remember them as a traditional black art. Plenty of cultures do their own braid styling, but African braiding has its own very long chapter in the history of braiding. I felt charged to make them tangible in a way where I could create an icon that honors my experience with braiding, my love for my clients and a celebration of black feminine beauty coiffeur in my own words, in my own images outside of magazines.
Each image has been captioned.
My dream home
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Aliens.
STOP THIS
when ur phoneâs on 1% and ur friend says âI have my chargerâ
yas gurlll you saved my social life
me everyday