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we're not kids anymore.
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@ipseitee
TLC, 1994
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Crochet Pokemon made by MissBajo
Diarra Ndiaye at Dolce & Gabbana Alta Moda 2020
Xiao Wen Ju for Harper’s Bazaar China, March 2010.
kim yerim? a beauty.
Made another mini cake and it turned out to be an...Eevee! Caught in a hand painted Poké Ball lunchbox for an extra delivery of cuteness ❤️
Until we meet again
Trying to get back into photostudies, this one is referenced after this
megan thee stallion
normani: fuckin it up like oopsie daisy
v magazine nº25 september 2003 “j'adore beyoncé” photographed by mario testino
theestallion: And what about ittt 🍷
Waiting to Exhale (1995)
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i spent like four months on this
Get yourself a fabric store that will light your fabric on fire for you
No but legit I asked what the fiber content of something was and the guy didn’t know so he cut a chunk off and lit it on fire and felt the ashes and was like. Yeah this is mostly cotton with a lil bit of silk. And that was the moment I knew. This is it. This is the fabric store for me. Also that guy is marriage material. Not for me but damn some person is gonna be so happy with him.
Ok but this is actually one of the easiest ways to tell what something is made of! I did a textiles degree and one day as part of a class we all went outside with a pile of scrap fabric and set fire to the little pieces and recorded how they burned. We were given a chart that looked something like this to tell what each fabric was (it gets a little tricky is it's a mix of fabrics though). Why did we do this? There is very little regulation in the textiles industry so a lot of materials are mislabelled as something they aren't and sold for more than they should be, also sometimes people buy fabric second hand or discounted which doesn't have any label at all. If you have a fabric you are having doubts about, cut a tiny piece off and do the burn test and you should know pretty fast what you are dealing with. Anyways your fabric store should be lighting things on fire because this means that they are actually checking what the fabrics are and aren't trying to pass cheap stuff off as more expensive than it is.
Ooh! I knew it was a standard test but I hadn’t seen a chart as detailed as this thank you!