
@theartofmadeline
NASA

ellievsbear

oozey mess
hello vonnie
One Nice Bug Per Day

Origami Around

Kaledo Art
$LAYYYTER
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH

Product Placement
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Mike Driver
styofa doing anything
art blog(derogatory)
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
trying on a metaphor
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
cherry valley forever
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@cosmiclavender
Banquet table
A.W. Dow Cyanotypes c.1900
time isn’t real !
Aliet Sarah by Tom Newton  for Into The Gloss - October 2018
Al Pacino as Sonny Wortzik in Dog Day Afternoon (1975)
Animation backgrounds from Disney’s 101 DALMATIANS (1961).
carine gilson lace-trimmed silk georgette cape detail
Scott Fraser - Crab Cake, 2019
Mother-Daughter Bonding
Central to the film is a reclamation of the Orpheus myth, a version of which the three young women read aloud together one night. Sophie registers distress at Orpheus’s fatal, selfish incompetence in looking back at Eurydice when he was told not to, and Marianne suggests he may have done it on purpose, preferring to lose the woman and savor, instead, the romance of his grief, making not “the lover’s choice, but the poet’s.” But it’s Héloïse who removes, for once, the fixation on Orpheus, his failings, and his loss. What if, she says to Marianne with an edge of defiance, it was Eurydice herself who chose art over staying together, who rather than leave the underworld with Orpheus, stopped and called out “Turn around,” preferring to remain down there and be preserved in poetry. A kind of freedom and a kind of permanence, rather than, as eighteenth-century marriage looks to be, an unwilling exchange of one for the other. — In Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Love is a Work of Art
LES’ by lesia paramonova rtw autumn 2o19Â
One Sings, the Other Doesn’t (1977)
Fran Drescher in The Nanny (1993-1999)