Quarry Bay, Hong Kong Photograph: William Shun

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cherry valley forever

JBB: An Artblog!
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
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titsay
$LAYYYTER
Show & Tell
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Peter Solarz
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
todays bird
Mike Driver
Xuebing Du

Janaina Medeiros

⁂
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
sheepfilms

★
Three Goblin Art
seen from South Korea
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@humannnnnnnn
Quarry Bay, Hong Kong Photograph: William Shun
We Are The Ocean
Ursala Hudson (Tlingit/Filipino/German)
collar: merino wool, silk, steel cones, leather. ravenstail patterns, crochet, basketry twining technique. Woman as a Wave shawl: merino wool, silk, cedar bark. chilkat and ravenstail patterns, crochet, basketry twining technique. Tidal apron: merino wool, silk, leather, steel cones. chilkat and ravenstail patterns.
“We Are the Ocean is an ensemble comprised of a collar, apron (entitled Tidal), and shawl (entitled Woman as a Wave). The collar and bottom edge of the shawl are twined using a basketry technique to bring delicacy to the regalia, made specifically to emphasize the wearer’s feminine essence. In place of the sea otter fur that traditionally lines the top of Chilkat and Ravenstail weavings, the merino weft yarns were used to crochet the collar and shawl’s neck lines, bringing forward and incorporating a European craft practiced by both my maternal (Tlingit/Filipino) and paternal (German) grandmothers. The high neck of the collar gives tribute to the Western aesthetics that have forever influenced the Indigenous cultures of our lands; with grace, we embrace that which cannot be undone, and use our new form to be better. The apron’s pattern was studied and graphed from an old Tlingit cedar bark basket, and represents the tides of our lives, as our lessons continue to arise in a revolving cycle, yet made of new debris. The repetitive pattern of the shawl represents the infinite connectedness of our sisters, mothers, aunties, and daughters. Blue lines break up inverted rows, representing the “past,” “present,” and “future,” acknowledging these concepts as irrelevant constructs that fall away when we commune with the Divine. The entire ensemble is worn to evoke the innate spirit of the Woman as an ethereal deity, that resides within us all.”
In a room full of people, i’d look at you so we can leave
Baby Globe, Wikipedia’s 25th birthday mascot
A damaged lying Buddhist statue is pictured inside a pagoda following an earthquake in Mandalay, Myanmar, April 3, 2025.
Does anyone know what to do
Disco Enjolras living in my brain rent free
it's so foggy out on the road i can't make out (makeout?! 😳😏😳🥺⁉️❤️❣️?💗💓💕💞💖💛💚💖💛💝💋?) a thing 10 feet infront of me
*small service bell ringing*
You're listening to
*hmph!*
102.3
*awawa*
Real Princess FM
*tea pouring*
Where we play nothing but the most proper music
*window opens*
*dramatic sigh*
This isn't your queen's station
*Imagine Dragons- Radioactive starts playing*
@myaestus beat me to the joke but I still want to upload mine
‘New Trees’ (2012) ph. Robert Voit
Voit's photographed cell phone towers camouflaged as trees across multiple countries, from Britain to the US and South Africa. In pursuit of seamless connectivity, there is a strong public objection to the unsightly appearance of bare cell phone towers. As a result, many companies opt to disguise these towers as trees, church steeples, flag poles, water tanks, and various other structures. These are widely known as "stealth towers" or "stealth installations."
I didn’t trim this one. Indecent.
If T makes you gain weight and E and antidepressants do it too, and so does enjoying good food and not being hungry all the time, then perhaps maybe sometimes joy & weight gain come hand in hand and that's good
L.S. Lowry (British, 1887-1976), The Cripples, 1949. Oil on canvas, 76 x 101.5 cm. The Lowry, Salford, Greater Manchester