PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

#extradirty
Cosimo Galluzzi
wallacepolsom
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
ojovivo
trying on a metaphor
occasionally subtle
will byers stan first human second
Today's Document

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taylor price
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Claire Keane
Peter Solarz

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blake kathryn

oozey mess
One Nice Bug Per Day

seen from Belgium
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seen from Brazil

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seen from Malaysia
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@corronancy
Símbolos de los 20 días del calendario mexica
your co-workers are not your friends get your money and go home!!!
(via jangeles91)
Los domingos debería durar al menos unas 72 horas.
I WANT THEM ALL 😍😍😍😍😍👌
My mom
ever since i showed this vine to my mom she wont stop saying jesus cristo the same way he says it
bro my mans is dragging the frozen food section…
this is the best vine
I need to know who remixed this
Iconography in Mexico’s day of the dead: Origins and meaning
This article analyzes the origin and meaning of artistic representations of death-principally skulls and skeletons-in Mexico’s Day of the Dead. It challenges stereotypes of the death obsessed Mexican by tracing mortuary imagery in the Day of the Dead to Two separate artistic developments, the first deriving from religious and demographic imperatives of colonial times, the second from nineteenth-century politics and journalism. Now generally perceived as belonging to a single, undifferentiated iconographic tradition, cranial and skeletal images of death have become virtually synonymous with Mexico itself.
Brandes, Stanley. “Iconography in Mexico’s day of the dead: Origins and meaning.” Ethnohistory (1998): 181-218.
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/2tt3663j
I was interested in learning the origins of Day of the Dead imagery and went hunting for some sources. Hope you find this article as interesting as I did.
With Dia de los Muertos right around the corner, I wanted to reblog this.
the funniest part about this vine is that u can literally see her get the idea to tape her nose like that omg
When your dad one-ups you…😳
#Love it!