Main inspirations: Velvet Goldmine, Maneskin, Robert Plant, Freddie Mercury, Mick Jagger, Brian Eno, Iggy Pop, etc.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

roma★

Origami Around
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year

Kaledo Art

tannertan36
Cosmic Funnies

Product Placement
Claire Keane
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Peter Solarz

pixel skylines
todays bird
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almost home

Discoholic 🪩
d e v o n
art blog(derogatory)
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

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@mangomoodboard
Main inspirations: Velvet Goldmine, Maneskin, Robert Plant, Freddie Mercury, Mick Jagger, Brian Eno, Iggy Pop, etc.
Mapping the Rue Royale Townhouse
Photos from Alfonso Bresciani for AMC
Around episode 2 or 3 I started to struggle in mapping the layout of the townhouse’s rooms in my head - how many pianos do they have? What orientation is the bed to the coffin room? Where are the fireplaces located? I like to build maps in my head to orient myself (no surprise that the 3D render is my favourite part of any Grand Designs episode) so my first port of call was to look at the floorplan of the original 1132 Rue Royale, the historic Gallier House.
This is a real life historic house that you can visit, and Anne Rice has said it was the inspiration for Lestat’s townhouse in the book, as well as being used for all the exterior shots in the tv show.
But then I was watching a presentation on YouTube by the show’s production designer, Mara LePere-Schloop, and she actually shared the floorplan used to build the townhouse set! I excitedly took a screenshot (again, apologies for the quality, which was limited by the video quality) to compare against the original Gallier House. Even though the actual house is on two levels with a central staircase, the set is built with both levels side by side, with a partial staircase in between for ease of production. Even with this key difference, they were surprisingly faithful to the layout of the original house, even where they didn’t need to be.
Case in point - there’s a door leading from the coffin room to the landing, which makes sense in Gallier House as the coffin room is a sitting room. But seeing as how the coffin room is meant to be secret in the show (concealed behind a hidden door in the bedroom panelling), there’s no real need to have a door there, especially when it’s barely concealed by tapestries and furniture on the show (and burst through during the episode 5 fight). I’m not even going to mention the failings of the New Orleans police department in not noticing it during their search in episode 5!
Another feature from the original house that was replicated on set are the steps leading down into Claudia’s room from the landing. The placement of Claudia’s room is where the bath and slave quarters were in the original house, and appear to be an extension, where the difference in levels necessitating a few steps would make sense. But there’s no real need for these when you’re building a set from scratch, and I kinda love that they kept them in even though there was no real need for them there (if nothing else, it meant we got to see Lestat prance down them to throw open her coffin lid in episode 5!)
And the final original detail that they didn’t really have to replicate (but I’m very glad they did!) was the incredible aperture skylight on the landing above the piano. Apparently Mara was so taken with the one in Gallier House on an early visit that Rolin Jones (showrunner) found a way to incorporate it into the script, meaning we not only got to see Lestat closing it in episode 2, but Claudia using it to self-harm in episode 4.
I absolutely love the detail and thought that went into the Rue Royale townhouse, from the design to the furnishings to the artwork but also that they built a near-realistic townhouse on set - it brings a level of realism to the show that wouldn’t be present if it was filmed in a series of disconnected, 3-walled set rooms.
They can smash your cookie, but you'll always have your fortune.
Tarot cards by Italian comics artist, Sergio Toppo.
Heavy Metal Animals
I love them.
Spiky bois
Several wild Sasukes
Love these metal babies
Architecture of Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust
(via mejirosworld, mejirosworld)
illusionsperdues: Butoh dance troupe Sankai Juku performing Kagemi - Photo Jacques Denarnaud
(via mejirosworld)
I’ve been playing around with animating images in photoshop recently. These are my first two attempts, inspired by a korean fashion instagram I follow.
Today is the Autumn Equinox
What’s up Fall!
This Side of Paradise, Todd Hido
Jon Juarez - http://harrihorrihar.blogspot.com.es - https://www.facebook.com/Harriorrihar - https://harriorrihar.myportfolio.com - https://www.instagram.com/harriorrihar - http://harriorrihar.tumblr.com - https://twitter.com/harriorrihar - https://www.etsy.com/shop/harriorrihar - https://vimeo.com/harriorrihar
EZRA MILLER for GQ Style (2018), ph. Yoshiyuki Matsumara.
Unpublished piece.
Character-designs by Manabu Ohashi for “Kin no Tori” movie (1987). Full gallery : https://www.catsuka.com/gengal/artworks//kinnotori https://www.pinterest.fr/catsuka/animation-artworks/kin-no-tori/ ( Gengal update 21/31 ) #AnimationArtworks
蜘蛛面🕷
Darkness on the Edge of Town