Belle
hello vonnie
cherry valley forever
Misplaced Lens Cap

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i don't do bad sauce passes
Show & Tell

Love Begins

Product Placement

izzy's playlists!
wallacepolsom
Acquired Stardust

blake kathryn
almost home

Andulka

tannertan36
KIROKAZE

pixel skylines
ojovivo

Discoholic 🪩

if i look back, i am lost

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@folkvisuals
Belle
Queen of East Texas
“The prettiest of the Grand Duchesses,’" says Count Grabbe, "was Tatiana, the Tsar’s second daughter. In her physical appearance and her serious and ardent nature, she most resembled her mother. She was also the family’s manager and organizer, and possessed, more than her sisters, a highly developed sense of her position as the daughter of the Tsar."
Professionally taken photograph of Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna Romanov in 1916.
Romanovs photos places Then vs.now
Someone should really do a hair tutorial for OTMA because let's face it, their hair was and is fabulous.
How very true! Tatiana’s 1914 hairstyle was fabulous and one of a kind. Are there any historical hair experts here? ;)
Olga seemed to have adopted the earliest form of the Bob cut with the Marcel wave, she had still long hair but you can see the likeness with the hairstyle that would become extremely popular in the 1920s
The three eldest would adopt this hairstyle
Tatiana wore a wig for this formal photograph she had typhus after drinking contaminated water during the tercentenary celebration. The wig has always intrigued me because it wasn’t the fashion of the time.
27 February 1918: “Our hair has grown, it is as long as in that picture after I had typhus, with the ribbon in it, do you remember? It grows much quicker now because I think first we had our heads shaved twice and secondly we did not wear wigs so it was much more comfortable. The first time I was ashamed of myself as I was all alone, but now we are all four in the same state!”
Anastasia had this old fashioned hairstyle like her mother here, curly or frizzed bang was very popular during the Bustle Period it was even called the “Alexandra Fringe” after Anastasia’s great-aunt Queen Alexandra.It wasn’t until 16 or so that young girls pinned up their hair. And well Anastasia and Maria hairstyle in 1914 is quite easy to reproduce :)
Traditional hairstyle/ Sviledgrad, Haskovo region, Bulgaria
Source: Endangered Ethnographic Archives, Ethnographic Institute and Museum at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and the British Library
Traditional Costume from Vrlika, Croatia
Vorarlberg, Austria Traditional Costume
Vorarlberger Tracht
Traditional Clothing from Split, Croatia
Splitska narodna nošnja
dusty americana
the dust bowl
The Swamp is Calling You!
Душа Красная
Greek Nose
Let Down Your Hair
With talks of a Tangled live action remake, I decided to create somewhat of a mood board, inspired of course by beautiful Bavaria♡
Mayerling.
Melissa Hamilton and Rupert Pennefather.
Lauren Cuthbertson and Thiago Soares.
Natalia Osipova and Edward Watson.
Melissa Hamilton and Rupert Pennefather.
Natalia Osipova and Edward Watson.
Sarah Lamb and Steven McRae.
Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna in the uniform of the 9th Kazansky Dragoons.
Věra Čáslavská
Čáslavská (May 3, 1942 - August 30, 2016) was a Czechoslovak artistic gymnast. She is the second-most awarded female gymnast in the Olympics, with a total of 11 medals.
Before the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, her training facility was lost due to the Soviet led invasion of Czechoslovakia. She was then forced to train alone, in the forest, using logs as beams and potato sacks as weights. Despite her setbacks, she went on to win medals in all six events.
While at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics Čáslavská publicly protested the 1968 Soviet Invasion of Czechoslovakia by silently looking down and away while the USSR’s anthem played.
She was revered by the Czech people and was awarded Czechoslovakia’s Sportsperson of The Year award in 1968. However, due to her protest, she became a persona non grata in the new Czechoslovak regime, and was forced to retire, also being denied the ability to travel and work.
21 years later, after the Velvet Revolution, Čáslavská’s status had improved and she became the President’s adviser on sports and social matters. Her story is that of resistance and resilience in times of hardship, she was a Czech icon whose protest should never be forgotten.