Screenshot is from Bioshock infinite but there seems to be a resemblance

@theartofmadeline
occasionally subtle
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Misplaced Lens Cap

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Three Goblin Art
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

titsay
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
will byers stan first human second
DEAR READER
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

JVL

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
noise dept.
Not today Justin

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Janaina Medeiros
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@drignacious
Screenshot is from Bioshock infinite but there seems to be a resemblance
Have the guts to look them all in the eye and warn them first.
where'd that horse girl lae'zel truther post go
If y'all could follow my friend Salty it would be greatly appreciated Watch SaltyTheAlien with me on Twitch! https://www.twitch.tv/saltythealien?sr=a
There should be a specific fashion item for keeping your sleeves rolled up. Like big clasping arm bracelets. I think this would improve morale in the gay community somewhat.
There is though
They’re called Sleeve Garters, they started off in the 19th century and where popular with musicians, gamblers, gunslingers and the occasional Victorian gentleman. Nowadays you can see bartenders wearing them
Sluts! (affectionate)
Bartenders & hairdressers.
Here’s one example of Modern Pop Culture sleeve garters:
Telegraph operators, bank clerks and printers wore them too, possibly along with a green celluloid eyeshade; they appear in movies ranging from Westerns to 1930s gangster stuff. The intention was to keep sleeves pulled tightly away from ink and other risks of staining.
An alternative - or extra - was to wear protective “sleeve stockings”.
Old-style shirts were cut longer and fuller than modern styles, and besides the protective aspect of the previous examples, sleeve garters also allowed for adjustment so “the right amount” of cuff showed between hand and jacket.
When gamblers wore them it was partly for fashion and partly to show there was no spare room for an Ace up the sleeve.
(Hah. I just bet. If that’s the right phrase and I don’t think so.)
*****
Period shirts also had separate collars, cuffs and bib / bosom / dickie / shirt-front - these were the bits most likely to get dirty, so could be exchanged for clean ones without washing the entire shirt.
They were made of starched linen, celluloid or stiff paper, and the cuffs could be used as somewhere to make a hasty note perhaps using a miniature propelling pencil like this, one of the many useful (or indeed “useful”) gadgets that could be attached to a watch-chain.
Paper collars-and-cuffs were disposable, cloth ones were washable (though needed re-starched afterwards), and celluloid ones could be wiped clean like a modern white-board.
(Sapolio still exists, BTW.)
Old silent comedy films sometimes showed characters who looked fine at first but were so hard-up than all they wore beneath their jacket is a vest (undershirt, not waistcoat), collar, cuffs and shirt-front, with no shirt at all. IIRC Charlie Chaplin did this at least once.
*****
Here’s a video showing the whole process. It’s more complicated than I thought, and also mentions sleeve garters as “an extra step”…
…while this video shows the business of wearing collar-cuffs-and-bib (etc.) without a shirt.
Incidentally, the chap in the video is wearing a monocle not just for The Look Of The Thing, but because he has monocular astigmatism. Another of those neat situations where - like the lumbar support of a well-made corset - period clothing provides a modern benefit.
FYI Tumblr has this thing (community labels) and by default ALL these category filters are set to remove anything labelled with these from your feed entirely (not just blurred).
If you want to see all of our posts make sure you set it to SHOW and not Hide! At the very least set "Sexual Themes" to show, you can adjust the others however you'd like. if you're under 18 (you shouldn't even be on our blog), but you won't be able to adjust them as they are set to Hide until you turn 18. Also make sure the "Hide additional potentially mature content" is toggled off as well.
This is what it looks like in settings (we have everything set to Show, the default is Hide)
REBLOG THIS TO SPREAD THE WORD
Casual reminder ✨🏳️⚧️🙌
My wife and I are doing youtube. Check us out please.
I did it. I did it.
Is this you?? and why does nobody talk about it if it is???
For the same reason that even the people who notice that I wrote the English language lyrics to the songs in Princess Mononoke fail to notice or remember that I wrote the entire English Language script: Venusian Brain Worms. They feed on memories and knowledge and for some reason the factoid that I wrote the English language script for Princess Mononoke is the tastiest thing in the world for them.
Studio Ghibli’s Steve Alpert sheds light on the translation efforts
[February 2017] Winston, OR
Here’s a photo of a cutie patootie 👅
Check out my IG: @vfc.jpg
Me: *posts about my native accent referencing Ripper Street on an alternate Twitter account*
@corpyburd : *likes tweet*
Me:
He started voicing Batman/ Bruce Wayne in “Batman: The Animated Series,” which ran from 1992- 1995.
My heart hurts
I'm still getting used to tumblr, but...hey, I write songs about haikyuu kind of a lot! here's one about oikawa :) it's disco :) I like disco :)
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Livia Marin, Chilean born artist imagines a whole new world for cups and teapots in her series of ceramic Nomad Patterns. The artist deflected by making ceramic bathing, a very surreal way, in flasks covered and sagging patterns. A fabulous clash between tradition and modernity.
Livia Marin has reshaped service porcelain teapots and cups by giving them a molten appearance … all without damaging or changing the patterns inscribed on objects!
One year on Testosterone.