September 1975. ‘Lanolin Plus “Fruit Shampoos” keep your hair Super Naturally fragrant and beautiful.’
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September 1975. ‘Lanolin Plus “Fruit Shampoos” keep your hair Super Naturally fragrant and beautiful.’
Yoriyuki 201803
Tiger Tateishi
Did art school made you hate drawing besides being generally unhelpful?
I don’t have the money for that shit!! all I have is a high school diploma and my will to live.
Brigitte Niedermair
Brooch, 1754 England, the Victoria & Albert Museum
Hair had long been important in sentimental jewellery, but during the 18th century it took on a new prominence. It could now form the centrepiece of a jewel, arranged in complicated motifs or as plain, woven sections. Tiny fragments of hair could even be incorporated into delicate paintings. Some designs were made by professionals, but many women chose to work the hair of loved ones themselves, using gum to secure their creations.
Hair jewels were worn to cherish the living as well as to remember the dead. The survival of many pieces celebrating love and friendship indicate their great social importance
Rob Mallet-Stevens. Album “A Modern City”, 1922. Pochoir coloured plates. London, Benn Brothers, Via Nosbüsch-Stucke
“In 1911, he began publishing pochoir drawings of modern villas and other buildings in a geometric style influenced by Josef Hoffmann, Frank Lloyd Wright and Charles Rennie Mackintosh. These led to the influential album. Unlike Le Corbusier, Mallet-Stevens had no interest in radicalizing the urban plan. He simply took each of the standard buildings of the modern town, from the fire station to the individual house, and applied a ‘modern’ style to it. It is possible, however, that these illustrations proved much more influential for contemporary architects than Le Corbusier’s austere urban and architectural projects.” (Charlotte Benton, Art Deco 1910-1939, V&A, London)
Alecia Morais @ Delpozo Spring 2017
Just a couple of dogs sharing a shower (Source: http://ift.tt/2kfSfYe)