fish :3
I quite like drawing with kidpix
Three Goblin Art

Janaina Medeiros
Xuebing Du
No title available
trying on a metaphor
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
h
No title available
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

if i look back, i am lost
ojovivo
Sade Olutola

blake kathryn
Stranger Things
d e v o n
occasionally subtle
we're not kids anymore.
Acquired Stardust
Cosmic Funnies

⁂

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Malaysia
seen from Lithuania
seen from France

seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@damydevito
fish :3
I quite like drawing with kidpix
Parallel
VINTAGE CHRISTY SLIDING KNIFE | LISTING
“The ad was in a women’s magazine and if I remember correctly, was for a perfume. It featured a white woman lying in bed with a black man. The man’s shirtless back was to the viewer, making only his taut, muscular form and powerful-looking arms and shoulders visible. He was faceless, unidentified. The woman looked sultrily at us from over his mysterious form, satisfaction writ large over her features. She had partaken of whatever delights this man had to offer and was smugly, luxuriantly basking in the afterglow. The ad copy was, “Take a walk on the wild side.” My teacher used the ad as an example of how marketers can use certain words and images to convey large amounts of information subtly and effectively. A white woman having sex with a black man? How risqué. The implication: be a little like that woman. Spray on that perfume and feel like the kind of girl who has sex with faceless, muscular black men in ritzy hotel rooms because it’s an adventure, a thrill, a risk, something illicitly pleasurable. These are the semiotics of race. This is why columnists will trip over themselves not to call Lupita Nyong’o or Angela Basset “beautiful”, choosing instead to use terms that call to mind a kind of savage, animalistic magnetism: fierce, striking, edgy, eye-catching. Words like “pretty” and “beautiful” and “cute” are for white women whose bodies and sexualities are not seen as wild, animal, or untamed. Black men are hulking, threatening, thuggish; white men are charming, sexy heartthrobs with hearts of gold. Brown women are exotic, with their “honey-coloured” skin and their “mystical”, “enchanting” beauty, unlike their white counterparts, who are held up as not only ideal, but knowable and safe. White people are beautiful; non-white people are dangerous.”
—
“The Semiotics of Race, or: Walks on the Wild Side”
by Aaminah Khan
(via haramdaddy)
On Reagan's deathaversary I just want to say:
It rules when homophobes die
It rules when conservative icons drop dead
It Will Happen
we gotta get back into revolving bookcases i'm begging
truly we allow the pinnacles of human achievement to wither and collapse into ashes in the wind
i would so go on a walk with you
this would fix me
Fox cubs at the bird bath, Surrey, England
by Hazel Byatt
森のめざめ
Prideful Awooing
The solar eclipse of June 19, 1936. L'Astronomie : revue mensuelle d'astronomie. 1937. Gallica.