Nike Flyknit Racer - Dark Grey/White/Black (by Myka)
NASA
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

#extradirty
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
noise dept.
Mike Driver
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
ojovivo
Cosimo Galluzzi
Monterey Bay Aquarium

Janaina Medeiros
$LAYYYTER
Cosmic Funnies

祝日 / Permanent Vacation

Andulka
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

No title available
almost home

Product Placement
todays bird
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Romania
seen from Indonesia

seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Chile

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Sweden
seen from Netherlands
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Germany
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
@hengjin
Nike Flyknit Racer - Dark Grey/White/Black (by Myka)
Here she is, in the flesh! My advance copy of the Women In This Town book arrived in the mail yesterday. I can’t wait for you to see what I’ve been working on all this time, I think you’re going to love it. The book will be available in bookshops around the world on November 1st but it’s available to pre-order now.
- Giuseppe
New Balance 997 CGR ‘Pumice Stone’ (by LittleJean Truong)
Buy from End Clothing / eBay
Honestly Weird: The Blank Canvas of SoKo
To see more of SoKo’s photos, check out @sokothecat on Instagram. For more music stories, head to Instagram @music.
When SoKo (@sokothecat) looks in the mirror, she sees a canvas. Last week, she bleached her eyebrows because she thought she looked “too normal” and “that was annoying.” A couple of days ago, she dyed them pink. Tomorrow? Not even she can be sure.
“I just want to be weird all the time,” she says. “It’s not even that I try to look different, it’s just that I like things that a lot of people don’t like. I embrace it fully. I love wearing pink eyebrows right now. I have a weird pajama shirt on and a weird hat, and it’s fun. Why not?”
This is the modus operandi of the French musician, songwriter, director, actress and all-around creative. From her look to her music, collaborations and starring roles, SoKo strives to imbue the work with a bit of that fierce individualism, a bit of herself.
“Everything I do needs to feel very true, otherwise I really don’t see the point,” she says. “I feel like I’m just wasting my time.”
Her ever-changing exterior is a reflection of the circuitry inside. On the phone, she’s girlish and manic. She describes her world as spontaneous and chaotic. She doesn’t have a home because she’s always on the go. Her precious possessions — thrift store clothes, flea market furniture and dirt-cheap vintage home décor — are safe in an expansive storage unit in the Los Angeles sprawl.
When recording a song, the room becomes an obstacle course of wires and machines. Her imagination is explosive, but beneath the superficial lawlessness lurks a distinct sense of order.
“I’m a little bit OCD with everything,” she says. “It’s always a mess, and it’s always out all over wherever I’m staying, but it’s always done in a way that I know exactly where this pedal is, and I know exactly what setting it’s on, and the amp is always on. I always know what’s going on, and it’s very particular to my weird brain.”
That “weird brain” was given room to roam free on her most recent LP My Dreams Dictate My Reality.
“I’ve always had really intense, weird dreams, and I’ve always been very sure of what I want to do,” she says. “I know what makes me feel good and that’s what I’m after — period. And that’s the same with my record. I just wanted to make a record that feels a little bit more upbeat and uplifting, that I can have more fun with on stage.”
As a follow-up to 2012’s debut I Thought I Was an Alien, it’s much more effervescent and structured.
“Before I was scared of pop,” she says. “My first record barely had any choruses, and it’s actually really fun. I think I grew up with this record.”
As with anything she touches, the record brings something more than meets the eye. Beside the ‘80s-inspired synth lines are excavating lyrics that dig up the pieces of a complex soul. Where her first album aimed at the affections of others, her latest takes a closer target.
“[Before] I was writing in a way that was just like ‘I’m a beautiful romantic person writing you a song and maybe you will love me,’” she says, laughing. “On this record I was more like, ‘F— this. I’m going to write what’s in my head. I don’t care what’s in yours. I’m just going to do my own thing and look in my past, see what was going on in my childhood. What made me so weird? What made me scared of death? And what makes me have fear of abandonment?’ All of these things were resurfacing while I was writing, and I’m like, ‘This needs to go down on the record. I need to go deep with that, make sure I sum it up and wrap my head around it so I can move on.’”
That ability to be honest inside and out is what makes SoKo so appealing. If she were anybody else, she might be everybody else, but she’s not, and that’s exciting.
“If my songs were not true, to have to go on stage and sing them every night, I’d feel like a liar,” she says. “I’ve always spoken from a very personal point of view and things that were always very raw and vulnerable, and I don’t know how to write anything else.”
—Kat Bein for Instagram @music
Capturing Saudade with @jayellehudson
For more from Jayelle, follow @jayellehudson on Instagram. For more Brazil stories, check out @instagrambrasil.
When she takes pictures, Jayelle Hudson (@jayellehudson) is focused on her control over an image, but in her abstract drawings she lets go. “I closed my eyes and decided to scribble,” explains the 31-year-old artist, photographer and entrepreneur. “I love the endless possibilities.” Having grown up in Washington state, Jayelle moved to São Paulo, Brazil, seven years ago. “I felt very much like an alien,” she recalls of her first months settling in and adapting to Brazilian language and culture. “Saudade,” the Brazilian word for missing something, is what Jayelle feels for her home in the Pacific Northwest. “It’s apparent in a lot of my collage work through choice of color, earth-toned moldy old paper and deep dark blues. In my photography, I find myself looking for moments that make me feel home, like foggy forests and cloudy beach days.”
Patta x Nike Air Max 1 - Blue Denim Corduroy (by Julien Chaintreau)
Work.
Khaki.
Similar look: Longline Bomber Jacket.
Weekend Hashtag Project: #WHPforeveryoung
Weekend Hashtag Project is a series featuring designated themes and hashtags chosen by Instagram’s Community Team. For a chance to be featured on the Instagram blog, follow @instagram and look for a post announcing the weekend’s project every Friday.
This weekend’s prompt was #WHPforeveryoung, which asked participants to be as playful as possible and make photos and videos that unlock their youthful creative spirit. Every Monday we feature some of our favorite submissions from the project, but be sure to check out the rest here.
Take me back #orentation2014
Its not about the score. Its giving your all #reserve
Stuck with these peps for the next 2 years 💞
Crazy crazy 2 days! #Selfie #group9
Teddy Bear! #CNY #ilikeboys #smallboys #cuteboys
Breakfast with @blueberrycheng #ladyironchef #gordanramsey (at Kitchen)
BOWLING MASCOTS 2014! Join bowling today! #AnimalFarm #Bowling #Penguin #Wolf #Dinosaur (at Animal farm)
My daughters first day of school!! ♥ #MGS (at Methodist Girls School)