hello vonnie
trying on a metaphor

@theartofmadeline
Peter Solarz
Misplaced Lens Cap
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
AnasAbdin
Mike Driver
DEAR READER

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JBB: An Artblog!
d e v o n
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JVL

Love Begins
we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever

roma★
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ellievsbear
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@h0ndreth
Arches National Park, Utah photo: Elliot McGucken
Maggie Ellis (American, 1991) - Better to Burn Out Than Fade Away (2017)
En route to Whistler, BC.
instagram: @renmoldovan
Euphorbia polygona
The traditional name for this plant is Euphorbia horrida var. major, and this is how one would normally find it labeled in a collection. Recently, however, all the plants that had been regarded as varieties of Euphorbia horrida have been merged into E. polygona. This makes sense, since the dividing line between the two species has always been problematic, but it is still annoying to collectors who wish names would stay the same. Flowers in Euphorbia arise from the middle of a structure called a cyathium, with five petal-like glands in a ring around the outside (in the photo, the glands are rust-orange, but they could also be dark purple or green in other forms of E. polygona). Each cyathium is located atop a stalk (peduncle) that later dries and hardens to form a spine. From South Africa.
-Brian
I have so much love for this river
Anaïs Nin, Delta of Venus, originally published: 1977
savior mode - balance and composure