Claire Keane

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
RMH
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occasionally subtle
ojovivo

#extradirty

izzy's playlists!
Sade Olutola
Misplaced Lens Cap
trying on a metaphor
NASA
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JBB: An Artblog!

Andulka
hello vonnie
Show & Tell

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seen from United States
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@garbage-pope
James Cherry, ''Heavy Metal'', Vol. 8, #3, June 1984
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My collection of vintage fish imagery is swimming along.
Jeanne Bieruma Oosting (1898–1994), “Noël 1939!”
lithograph, 1940
source
Tatami Hyakki Yagyo picture scroll, Edo period (1603–1868 AD), ink on paper from Japan. This scroll contains a flowing sequence of skulls arranged in a manner that evokes a procession, linking them to the concept of the Hyakki Yagyo, or “Night Parade of One Hundred Demons.”
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Here’s my seasonal collection of vintage (mostly weird) fashion.
Le poisson Steve, the 259th Known One.
Strega by Pia Valentinis
Source: Dorohedoro / ドロヘドロ
by Q Hayashida
Dark blue-ground festival kimono decorated with sea creatures, first half 20th century. Cloth: cotton; tsutsugaki (freehand resist) The John R. Van Derlip Fund and the Mary Griggs Burke Endowment Fund established by the Mary Livingston Griggs and Mary Griggs Burke Foundation.
💜💜💜HORSESHOECRAB GIRL !!!! :-)💜💜💜
(blog-post about her creation)
🪡 Gemeinnüzzige Naturgeschichte des Thierreichs bd. 4 plates Berlin ;bei Gottlieb August Lange, 1780-1789. The largely nocturnal spot-fin porcupine fish spends most of its time in caves or underneath coral & is poisonous 2 eat Original source Image description: Illustration of a spot-fin porcupine fish viewed from above, showing its rounded, spiky body covered in large, sharp spines. The fish has prominent, bulging eyes and an open mouth. Its fins are spotted with reddish markings. This nocturnal species typically inhabits caves or coral shelters and is poisonous to eat. The image is a detailed, historical print labeled “Diodon Hystrix, Linn. Der Igelfisch,” from an 18th-century natural history volume.
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Who will win in these vintage animal fights?.
The Gurumess from Flashman