Queen Bee, Mayumi Oda
RMH

Product Placement
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Mike Driver
styofa doing anything
art blog(derogatory)
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
trying on a metaphor
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
cherry valley forever

ellievsbear
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Game of Thrones Daily
AnasAbdin
h
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sheepfilms

JBB: An Artblog!
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Misplaced Lens Cap

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@levoneh
Queen Bee, Mayumi Oda
From the US but i spell grey with an e because e just feels like a much greyer letter than a
grey with an E is dusty neutral but gray with an A is bluish and darker
it really is, huh
Omg I’ve found my people
It's because GRAY is a West Saxon word for the quality of light, while GREY is an Anglian word for everyday objects. And everyday objects are typically earthy, warmer, or more neutral.
To explain: West Saxon and Anglian are both dialects of Old English. West Saxon was the politically dominant dialect, but Anglian was the more popular spoken dialect. So a lot of Old English texts are written in West Saxon, but what we know as Middle English and Modern English descended more from Anglian because it was spoken by more people.
So grey (the Anglian word) shows up when authors are describing everyday stuff. Like in this sentence describing a grey beard from Holy Boke Gratia Dei: "The hed of Petir is a brood face with mech her on his berd and that is of grey colour be twix whit and blak."
Any Middle English text you read, you'll find Anglian grey is the word the author prefers to describe everyday things. Grey wool, grey feathers, grey stones, grey horses.
By contrast, gray (the West Saxon word) shows up when authors are describing the qualities of light.
A gleaming gray sword, a deep gray lake, a misty gray morning, cold gray marble, sad gray eyes. Like in this sentence from The Siege of Jerusalem: "They glowes of graie steel that were with gold hemmyd." More often than not, gray describes an impermanent or glimmering quality of light.
There's even an instance where a Middle English author uses both, and you can see how one spelling is more about the quality of light while the other is more about the color of the animal: "The cerkyl or the roundel off the eye ys sumtyme graye lyke the ey off a catte, sumtyme blak grey lyke the eyn off doggys."
("The circle or round of the eye is sometimes gray like the eye of a cat, sometimes black-grey like the eyes of dogs.")
The reason Americans use gray and not grey is because Noah Webster hated the English. :)
so freakin cool
Very interesting to learn the origins of these two spellings!
(kelly link, "the specialist's hat")
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Archival advertisements reveal the trends of their time: here’s my collection of vintage ads.
Bruce Ackerson - Lobsters, 2024 - Oil on board
hello for those planning on voting for kamala harris. could y’all start emailing or calling her specifically to pressure her to stop the genocide. even if you’re a decided voter, mention you are undecided and that this is the issue you would flip on. here I’ll leave a link where you can email
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(x)
Journal of Art in Society@artinsociety·
Side entrance to Art Nouveau “Frog House” in Bielsko-Biała, Poland, built for the owner of a wine bar originally located there, with carousing frogs ~ one lounges, smoking a pipe, glass in hand & leaning on a barrel, as the other plays a mandolin (1903)
noah's ark (with dead bodies floating in the water)
in a book of hours, france, c. 1440–50
source: Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS. Auct. D. inf. 2. 11, fol. 59v
lil marginalia creatures
in an illuminated prayer book, france, 15th c.
source: Heidelberg, UB, Cod. Trübner 112, fol. 12v, 115r, and 112r
baby ducks
at the margins of an illuminated book of prayers, flanders and nuremberg, ca. 1510-1530
source: Kassel, UB, 4° Ms. math. 50, fol. 22r
Lily of the Valley Bracelet by BotanicalBirdJewelry
A young girl watches a milk waterfall out of a "magic pail" in the Dairy Exhibit at the Greater New York Silver Jubilee celebration, May 28, 1923.
Photo: Underwood Archives via Fine Art America
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Some especially lovely butterflies and butterfly people are collected here.
spuffy + pop culture references.
Pavane Von Klimt - John Simpkins