$LAYYYTER
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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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Sweet Seals For You, Always

JBB: An Artblog!
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
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@cuirladies
my favorites of Nils Udo
“Hi Mom, Guess What!” - First gay pride rally in philadelphia (1972) / Photographed by Kay Tobin Lahusen.
“DYKE PATROL” at a barnard college event, photographed by donna glickman, february 1974
“my queerness is traditional” Ryan Young 2017
One of my newest pieces for my senior project. Got a few pics done over the weekend and shooting more tomorrow!
“THANK GOD I’M GAY,” Timothy Hough (foreground) and other activists, AIDS vigil, San Francisco, California, 1983. Photo by Crawford Barton.
“when I walk into a church I only see paintings of white angels. why?”
[ID: a photo from lgbt_history on instagram. It shows a woman sitting atop the backseat of a car, which is adorned with flowers. She is holding a sign that says “100% bisexual, 100% queer with pairs of intersecting Venus and Mars symbols below it. She is wearing denim shorts and a denim vest which is covered in buttons and patches, as well as red shades and yellow socks pulled up to the middle of her calves. She has dark hair is smiling widely. In the front seat is another smiling woman, who is blonde and looks older than the first, wearing dark sunglasses and a white T-shirt. A banner on the car says “Community City Award”.]
@lgbt-history-archive: “100% BISEXUAL, 100% QUEER,” BiPol’s Jan Hansen, Pride Parade, San Diego, California, 1998. Photo c/o Lambda Archives of San Diego, via @lambdaarchives. #lgbthistory #HavePrideInHistory#SanDiegoPride #Resist#RollingIntoSaturdayNightLike
This photoshoot is dedicated to all the South Asian women out there who are often underrepresented in media simply because the color of their skin doesn’t fit South Asia’s unreasonable, fair&lovely, eurocentric beauty standards. As we all know, colorism is huge in India and Pakistan. Our society has come to the point where people talk about fighting oppression and uplifting women, but no one actually does anything about it. In this photoshoot I wanted to help represent darker skinned girls in the media, and address an issue through fashion photography.
Little girls grow up with their mothers bantering them about their skin color and how a man would never want them because they’re too dark. This does not help a girl’s self confidence, and it’s important to teach them from a young age that they’re beautiful and worthy in order to prevent them from being a self conscious teen. It’s also important to teach other girls that are lighter skinned to support these girls. In high school, a South Asian boy my friend had a crush on said that she was “too dark” and basically implied that’s the reason why he wouldn’t want a relationship with her. Comments like these are what destroy girl’s self confidence, especially when they’re young, vulnerable and lost. Support and help your sisters!
With the rise of young South Asians taking their pride in jewelry and colorful clothes to Instagram, it’s important not to romanticize the culture. Every culture has it’s good and bad, and although it’s totally fine to appreciate and be grateful for the good, we shouldn’t be silent about the bad especially if we are privileged. While our own South Asians are constantly romanticizing our culture, but not acknowledging it’s dirty laundry they are also promoting social marginalization. Women are treated horribly, LGBTQ isn’t a thing (especially in Pakistan), and more of our afro-south asian brothers and sisters are murdered on the streets the longer we stay silent. Instead of bringing light to these issues, our culture keeps quiet.
- Photographer Simrah Farrukh
Canon: Carol likes choking, and Therese enjoys getting choked.
gay🏝irl
butches are the tenderest lovers
jul. 2018, pride day.